I'm actually lucky in that I work at an institution that has a neurosurgeon who endovascularly removes clots. Works further out than tPA too 😀 Unfortunately these docs are much rarer than their cardiovascular colleagues.
Man, I hope it's not the MERCI device.
Stroke. 2005 Jul;36(7):1432-8. Epub 2005 Jun 16.
Safety and efficacy of mechanical embolectomy in acute ischemic stroke: results of the MERCI trial.
PMID: 15961709
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 2006 Nov-Dec;27(10):2048-52.
Endovascular mechanical clot retrieval in a broad ischemic stroke cohort.
PMID: 17110664
Stroke. 2008 Apr;39(4):1205-12. Epub 2008 Feb 28.
Mechanical thrombectomy for acute ischemic stroke: final results of the Multi MERCI trial.
PMID: 18309168
Stroke. 2007 Mar;38(3):967-73. Epub 2007 Feb 1.
The impact of recanalization on ischemic stroke outcome: a meta-analysis.
PMID: 17272772
The original MERCI achieved 46% recanalization rate - which compares to the stated spontaneous rate of 24.1% and IV TPA of 46.2% in the meta-analysis. 13% of the cases were complicated by device malfunctions, and 7% of their study population suffered additional harms from the device. 27% had favorable mRS at 90 days, but
43% died.
Now, they are enrolling only the most severe strokes for these trials - their mean NIHSS is ~20 +/- 6.6. I did have a little trouble finding good subgroup analyses of other stroke studies for comparison, but as a reference, ECASS III NIHSS >20 subgroup has 16% of favorable mRS with TPA and 8% with placebo. On the other hand, the mortality of that subgroup in ECASS III is 22% and 21%.
The MERCI authors concluded their trial was a negative study, stating that while the MERCI device demonstrated it was technically capable of performing recanalization, recanalization with the MERCI device was not associated with improved outcomes - which is a little interesting, since the meta-analysis states that recanalization had an OR of 4.4 of being associated with a good outcome. But in any event, they did what any manufacturer-supported group does after a negative study - more studies!
Multi-MERCI was stopped once in 2005 due to patient harms from protocol violations. The newer device showed a non-significant trend towards better recanalization (55%). Oddly enough, multi-MERCI reports their baseline NIHSS as a
median of 19, interquartile range 15-23, so it's tough to compare to the severity of illness of the original MERCI's
mean of 20 - but I would suggest their baseline was better. In any event, multi-MERCI had non-significant trends towards improvement in clinically significant procedural complications (5.5%), good mRS (36%) and mortality (34%).
As another comparison, the SITS-MOST review of widespread TPA administration, with 6000+ patients with median NIHSS of 12, good mRS was achieved in 55% and only 11% died.
In both MERCI and multi-MERCI, the studies are funded by the manufacturer, several authors have ownership stakes in the device, and the inventor of the device is even one of the authors. Both studies also evaluate >1000 patients for deployment before hand-picking 100-odd to enroll.
Far too many issues for me to evaluate the efficacy of this treatment and the appropriate population in which to apply it.