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Noeme · ksk3as7o

Published finding — does the expert body still believe it?

Endovascular thrombectomy plus standard medical therapy, compared with standard medical therapy alone, produces a favorable shift in 90-day modified Rankin Scale distribution (OR 2.77, P<0.001) in ischemic stroke patients treated 6 to 16 hours after last known well with perfusion-imaging-selected penumbra.

TL;DR · AI-generated

tldr@v2.0.0
semanticscholar.org

Endovascular thrombectomy for ischemic stroke 6 to 16 hours after a patient was last known to be well plus standard medical therapy resulted in better functional outcomes than standard medical Therapy alone among patients with proximal middle‐cerebral‐artery or internal‐carotid‐arterY occlusion and a region of tissue that was ischeMIC but not yet infarcted.

Author-implied confidence

95%

Status

DRAFT

Your position — does this noeme still stand given current evidence?

Consensus 95%

0% (impossible)

50%

100% (certain)

25
50
75

Proper-scoring-rule preview

If TRUE: Brier 0.250 · log 0.69 · +8 rep
If FALSE: Brier 0.250 · log 0.69 · -1 rep
Kelly 25.0% ≈ 250 rep
vs. consensus: 1.20 bits

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Evidence stream

1 event · 1 snapshot

posterior drift

98% → 98% (0pp · 1 point)

posterior drift: 98% → 98%
supports

Peer-reviewed paper

PMID 29364767

Apr 18, 2026

+3pp

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Source publication

Thrombectomy for Stroke at 6 to 16 Hours with Selection by Perfusion Imaging.

4.7k citations · S2 4.0k
163 influential
FWCI 372.8 · Landmark
OA · bronze
26 authors · 96% ORCID

· openalex W2787867590 · s2 ebb91cd3

Semantically related

Nearest claims in the expert-corpus vector space. Ordered by cosine distance — lower is closer.

Historical

0.0689

Endovascular thrombectomy plus standard care, performed 6 to 24 hours after stroke onset in patients with clinical-infarct mismatch, improves mean utility-weighted modified Rankin Scale score at 90 days compared to standard care alone (5.5 vs 3.4, adjusted difference 2.0 points).

Historical

0.0810

Among perfusion-imaging-selected stroke patients treated 6-16 hours after last known well, thrombectomy is associated with functional independence (mRS 0-2) in 45% of patients versus 17% with medical therapy alone (P<0.001).

Historical

0.0888

Endovascular thrombectomy plus standard care in the 6-24 hour window with clinical-infarct mismatch achieves functional independence (mRS 0-2) at 90 days in 49% of patients versus 13% in the standard care group, an adjusted difference of 33 percentage points.

Historical

0.0958

Endovascular thrombectomy in the 6-16 hour window is associated with a numerically lower 90-day mortality rate (14%) compared with medical therapy alone (26%, P=0.05) without a significant increase in symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (7% vs. 4%, P=0.75).

Historical

0.1219

The REVASCAT trial's stated primary conclusion — Thrombectomy up to 8h after stroke onset is superior to medical therapy in selected patients. — replicates in independent cohorts.

Historical

0.1279

Ninety-day mortality does not differ significantly between thrombectomy and standard care groups (19% vs 18%) in patients with acute stroke treated 6-24 hours after last known well with clinical-infarct mismatch.