Abstract
Background: Cardiac CT acquired during the acute stroke imaging protocol is an emerging diagnostic modality to detect cardiac thrombi. We aimed to determine its diagnostic yield in a large, international, multicenter study.
Methods: We performed an individual patient data meta-analysis by pooling prospective and retrospective observational data of patients with acute ischemic stroke (AIS) who underwent cardiac CT (ECG-gated or non-ECG-gated) as part of the acute imaging protocol between May 2018 and June 2024. We excluded patients with a TIA or stroke mimic. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients with a cardiac thrombus detected on cardiac CT. Secondary outcomes were additional scan time and radiation dose, comparison of yield with echocardiography, and 90-day mortality and recurrent ischemic stroke rates.
Results: We included 3940 patients from 4 hospitals (median age 74 [IQR 63-82], 58.0% male, median NIHSS 6 [IQR 3-12], median time onset to hospital arrival 100 minutes [IQR 62-185]). Atrial fibrillation at baseline was present in 23.1% patients, and 29.6% had a large vessel occlusion. Cardiac CT was non-diagnostic in 17 (0.4%) patients. In total, cardiac CT detected 254 cardiac thrombi in 243/3923 (6.2%) patients. Thrombi were located in the left atrial appendage (n=193), left atrium (n=19), and left ventricle (n=42). Of 95/243 (39.1%) patients with a cardiac thrombus that underwent echocardiography (median interval cardiac CT-echocardiography: 2 days), transthoracic echocardiography detected a thrombus in 18/92 (19.6%) patients and transesophageal echocardiography in 2/5 (40.0%) patients. The diagnostic yield in patients that underwent both modalities was higher for cardiac CT (OR 7.5 [CI 4.0-15.3], p<0.001). Median additional scan time was 6 minutes (IQR 5-7) for ECG-gated and 17 seconds (IQR 15-63) for non-ECG-gated cardiac CT. Median additional radiation dose was 5.4mSv (IQR 3.0-7.6). Patients with a cardiac thrombus on cardiac CT had higher 90-day mortality than those without a thrombus (33.3% vs 14.6%, p<0.001). We found no difference in 90-day recurrent stroke rate (5.4% vs 4.4%, p=0.50).
Conclusion: Routine cardiac CT performed during the acute stroke imaging protocol detects a cardiac thrombus in 1 out of 16 patients with AIS, with a 7-times higher yield than routine echocardiography. Mortality rate was doubled in patients with a cardiac thrombus, but 90-day stroke recurrence risk did not differ.