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Endovascular thrombectomy improves outcomes in large-core stroke within 24 hoursEndovascular thrombectomy improves outcomes for patients with large-core ischaemic stroke

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Key Takeaway
Consider endovascular thrombectomy for large-core ischaemic stroke within 24 hours, noting benefit but limited evidence for very large cores.

This systematic review and meta-analysis of individual patient data evaluated endovascular thrombectomy compared to medical management for patients with large-core ischaemic stroke, defined by a low ASPECTS score or large estimated ischaemic core, presenting within 24 hours of onset. The primary outcome was 90-day functional status on the modified Rankin Scale.

The authors observed that endovascular thrombectomy was associated with improved functional outcomes and reduced all-cause mortality compared to medical management. No significant differences were found between groups for symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhage or neurological worsening in the acute period. The analysis included nearly two thousand patients.

Key limitations noted by the authors include wide confidence intervals that limited interpretation for patients with an estimated ischaemic core volume of 150 mL or greater. The review did not report on other safety events or discontinuations.

Clinically, these results suggest a benefit for thrombectomy in eligible patients with large-core stroke within 24 hours. However, caution is warranted for those with very extensive ischaemic changes, where evidence remains limited.

Patients with large-core ischaemic stroke face a difficult choice between surgery and medical care. A new analysis of data from 1,886 patients helps clarify this decision for those who arrive within 24 hours of their stroke starting. The study focused on people with significant brain damage, defined by a score of 5 or less on the Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score or an estimated damaged area of 50 milliliters or more.

The team found that the surgery group had better function at 90 days compared to those receiving only medical management. Death rates were also lower in the surgery group. These benefits held true across different levels of brain damage and time since stroke onset, as long as the damage was not extremely widespread.

Safety checks showed no significant difference in bleeding risks between the two groups. However, the study notes that results for patients with very large damaged areas of 150 milliliters or more are less certain. This analysis confirms that surgery helps many patients but highlights where the evidence remains thin.

What this means for you:
Surgery improved function and reduced death risk for patients with large-core stroke arriving within 24 hours.

Study Details

Study typeMeta analysis
Sample sizen = 940
EvidenceLevel 1
PublishedMay 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
BACKGROUND: Patients with extensive ischaemic change are often excluded from endovascular thrombectomy. We aimed to synthesise the evidence from recent trials in these patients by performing a systematic review and individual patient data meta-analysis to estimate treatment benefit, including within clinical and imaging subgroups. METHODS: In this systematic review and meta-analysis, we searched PubMed and Embase for randomised trials published between March 1, 2018, and March 1, 2025, that evaluated efficacy and safety of endovascular thrombectomy compared with medical management in patients with large-core ischaemic stroke (based on an Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score [ASPECTS] of ≤5 or estimated ischaemic core ≥50 mL) presenting within 24 h of onset. Individual patient-level data from all eligible trials were obtained. A central imaging core laboratory readjudicated ASPECTS and reanalysed ischaemic core volume. A two-stage meta-analysis with random-effects model was used to evaluate the distribution of 90-day modified Rankin Scale (mRS) scores (the primary outcome) using adjusted pooled generalised odds ratios (aGenORs). Missing data were handled by multiple imputation. Safety outcomes were all-cause mortality within 90-day follow-up and neurological worsening within 24-48 h of randomisation, reported as adjusted pooled relative risk (aRR); and symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhage within 36 h of randomisation (reported as risk difference). Subgroup analyses based on clinical and imaging characteristics were done, including subgroups defined by ischaemic core volume, ASPECTS, and time window from onset to randomisation. The meta-analysis was registered with PROSPERO (CRD420251058584). FINDINGS: We included 1886 patients (944 assigned to endovascular thrombectomy and 942 assigned to medical management) from six trials. Baseline characteristics were similar between treatment groups. At day 90, the distribution of mRS scores was improved in patients in the endovascular thrombectomy group (median score 4 [IQR 3-6]; n=940) versus those in the medical management group (5 [4-6]; n=931; aGenOR 1·63 [95% CI 1·42-1·88], p<0·0001). The endovascular thrombectomy group also had reduced mortality (292 [31·1%]) compared with the medical management group (347 [37·3%]; aRR 0·82 [95% CI 0·70-0·97], p=0·022). No significant differences were observed in symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage (ten [1·1%] of 944 vs nine [1·0%] of 942 patients; pooled unadjusted risk difference -0·17 percentage points [95% CI -1·01 to 0·67], p=0·69) or neurological worsening (197 [22·0%] of 896 patients vs 161 [17·9%] of 899; aRR 1·19 [0·87-1·62], p=0·27). Improved functional outcomes with endovascular thrombectomy were consistent across clinical and imaging subgroups, except for those with an estimated ischaemic core volume of 150 mL or greater, in whom point estimates favoured endovascular thrombectomy, particularly in the early time window (0-6 h), but wide 95% CIs limited interpretation. INTERPRETATION: Endovascular thrombectomy was associated with improved functional outcomes and reduced mortality versus medical management in patients with large-core ischaemic stroke presenting within 24 h of onset. With the exception of very extensive ischaemic changes (core volume ≥150 mL) presenting beyond 6 h, where evidence remains limited, benefit was sustained across ASPECTS and ischaemic core strata for patients presenting up to 24 h after onset. FUNDING: None.
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