• Neurocritical care · Jul 2024

    Association of Dynamic Trajectories of Time-Series Data and Life-Threatening Mass Effect in Large Middle Cerebral Artery Stroke.

    • Charlene J Ong, Qiuxi Huang, KimIvy So YeonISYDepartment of Neurology, Boston Medical Center, 1 Boston Medical Center PI, Boston, MA, 02118, USA., Jack Pohlmann, Stefanos Chatzidakis, Benjamin Brush, Yihan Zhang, Yili Du, Leigh Ann Malinger, Emelia J Benjamin, Josée Dupuis, David M Greer, Stelios M Smirnakis, and Ludovic Trinquart.
    • Department of Neurology, Boston Medical Center, 1 Boston Medical Center PI, Boston, MA, 02118, USA. Cjong@bu.edu.
    • Neurocrit Care. 2024 Jul 2.

    BackgroundLife-threatening, space-occupying mass effect due to cerebral edema and/or hemorrhagic transformation is an early complication of patients with middle cerebral artery stroke. Little is known about longitudinal trajectories of laboratory and vital signs leading up to radiographic and clinical deterioration related to this mass effect.MethodsWe curated a retrospective data set of 635 patients with large middle cerebral artery stroke totaling 95,463 data points for 10 longitudinal covariates and 40 time-independent covariates. We assessed trajectories of the 10 longitudinal variables during the 72 h preceding three outcomes representative of life-threatening mass effect: midline shift ≥ 5 mm, pineal gland shift (PGS) > 4 mm, and decompressive hemicraniectomy (DHC). We used a "backward-looking" trajectory approach. Patients were aligned based on outcome occurrence time and the trajectory of each variable was assessed before that outcome by accounting for cases and noncases, adjusting for confounders. We evaluated longitudinal trajectories with Cox proportional time-dependent regression.ResultsOf 635 patients, 49.0% were female, and the mean age was 69 years. Thirty five percent of patients had midline shift ≥ 5 mm, 24.3% of patients had PGS > 4 mm, and 10.7% of patients underwent DHC. Backward-looking trajectories showed mild increases in white blood cell count (10-11 K/UL within 72 h), temperature (up to half a degree within 24 h), and sodium levels (1-3 mEq/L within 24 h) before the three outcomes of interest. We also observed a decrease in heart rate (75-65 beats per minute) 24 h before DHC. We found a significant association between increased white blood cell count with PGS > 4 mm (hazard ratio 1.05, p value 0.007).ConclusionsLongitudinal profiling adjusted for confounders demonstrated that white blood cell count, temperature, and sodium levels appear to increase before radiographic and clinical indicators of space-occupying mass effect. These findings will inform the development of multivariable dynamic risk models to aid prediction of life-threatening, space-occupying mass effect.© 2024. Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature and Neurocritical Care Society.

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