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Dive into the research topics where Ben McGuinness is active.

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Featured researches published by Ben McGuinness.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2015

Endovascular Therapy for Ischemic Stroke with Perfusion-Imaging Selection

Bruce C.V. Campbell; Leonid Churilov; Nawaf Yassi; Bernard Yan; M. Brooks; F. Miteff; Martin Krause; Miriam Priglinger; Timothy Ang; Rebecca Scroop; Ben McGuinness; Tissa Wijeratne; Winston Chong; M. Badve; Henry Rice; L. de Villiers; Henry Hin Kui Ma; Abstr Act

BACKGROUND Trials of endovascular therapy for ischemic stroke have produced variable results. We conducted this study to test whether more advanced imaging selection, recently developed devices, and earlier intervention improve outcomes. METHODS We randomly assigned patients with ischemic stroke who were receiving 0.9 mg of alteplase per kilogram of body weight less than 4.5 hours after the onset of ischemic stroke either to undergo endovascular thrombectomy with the Solitaire FR (Flow Restoration) stent retriever or to continue receiving alteplase alone. All the patients had occlusion of the internal carotid or middle cerebral artery and evidence of salvageable brain tissue and ischemic core of less than 70 ml on computed tomographic (CT) perfusion imaging. The coprimary outcomes were reperfusion at 24 hours and early neurologic improvement (≥8-point reduction on the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale or a score of 0 or 1 at day 3). Secondary outcomes included the functional score on the modified Rankin scale at 90 days. RESULTS The trial was stopped early because of efficacy after 70 patients had undergone randomization (35 patients in each group). The percentage of ischemic territory that had undergone reperfusion at 24 hours was greater in the endovascular-therapy group than in the alteplase-only group (median, 100% vs. 37%; P<0.001). Endovascular therapy, initiated at a median of 210 minutes after the onset of stroke, increased early neurologic improvement at 3 days (80% vs. 37%, P=0.002) and improved the functional outcome at 90 days, with more patients achieving functional independence (score of 0 to 2 on the modified Rankin scale, 71% vs. 40%; P=0.01). There were no significant differences in rates of death or symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage. CONCLUSIONS In patients with ischemic stroke with a proximal cerebral arterial occlusion and salvageable tissue on CT perfusion imaging, early thrombectomy with the Solitaire FR stent retriever, as compared with alteplase alone, improved reperfusion, early neurologic recovery, and functional outcome. (Funded by the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council and others; EXTEND-IA ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01492725, and Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry number, ACTRN12611000969965.).


International Journal of Stroke | 2014

A multicenter, randomized, controlled study to investigate EXtending the time for Thrombolysis in Emergency Neurological Deficits with Intra-Arterial therapy (EXTEND-IA)

Bruce C.V. Campbell; Peter Mitchell; Bernard Yan; Mark W. Parsons; Soren Christensen; Leonid Churilov; Richard Dowling; Helen M. Dewey; Mark Brooks; Ferdinand Miteff; Christopher Levi; Martin Krause; Tim Harrington; Kenneth Faulder; Brendan Steinfort; Timothy J. Kleinig; Rebecca Scroop; Steve Chryssidis; Alan Barber; Ayton Hope; Maurice Moriarty; Ben McGuinness; Andrew Wong; Alan Coulthard; Tissa Wijeratne; Andrew Lee; Jim Jannes; James Leyden; Thanh G. Phan; Winston Chong

Background and Hypothesis Thrombolysis with tissue plasminogen activator is proven to reduce disability when given within 4.5 h of ischemic stroke onset. However, tissue plasminogen activator only succeeds in recanalizing large vessel arterial occlusion in a minority of patients. We hypothesized that anterior circulation ischemic stroke patients, selected with ‘dual target’ vessel occlusion and evidence of salvageable brain using computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging ‘mismatch’ within 4.5 h of onset, would have improved reperfusion and early neurological improvement when treated with intra-arterial clot retrieval after intravenous tissue plasminogen activator compared with intravenous tissue plasminogen activator alone. Study Design EXTEND-IA is an investigator-initiated, phase II, multicenter prospective, randomized, open-label, blinded-endpoint study. Ischemic stroke patients receiving standard 0.9 mg/kg intravenous tissue plasminogen activator within 4.5 h of stroke onset who have good prestroke functional status (modified Rankin Scale <2, no upper age limit) will undergo multimodal computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging. Patients who also meet dual target imaging criteria: vessel occlusion (internal carotid or middle cerebral artery) and mismatch (perfusion lesion: ischemic core mismatch ratio >1.2, absolute mismatch >10 ml, ischemic core volume <70 ml) will be randomized to either clot retrieval with the Solitaire FR device after full dose intravenous tissue plasminogen activator, or tissue plasminogen activator alone. Study Outcomes The coprimary outcome measure will be reperfusion at 24 h and favorable clinical response (reduction in National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale by ≥8 points or reaching 0–1) at day 3. Secondary outcomes include modified Rankin Scale at day 90, death, and symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage.


Brain | 2014

Autonomic dysfunction is a major feature of cerebellar ataxia, neuropathy, vestibular areflexia ‘CANVAS’ syndrome

Teddy Y. Wu; Jennifer Taylor; Dean Kilfoyle; Andrew Smith; Ben McGuinness; Mark Simpson; Elizabeth Walker; Peter S. Bergin; James C. Cleland; David O. Hutchinson; Neil E. Anderson; Barry Snow; Tim J. Anderson; Laura A. F. Paermentier; Nicholas J. Cutfield; Andrew M. Chancellor; Stuart Mossman; Richard Roxburgh

Cerebellar ataxia, neuropathy and vestibular areflexia syndrome (CANVAS) is a recently recognized neurodegenerative ganglionopathy. Prompted by the presence of symptomatic postural hypotension in two patients with CANVAS, we hypothesized that autonomic dysfunction may be an associated feature of the syndrome. We assessed symptoms of autonomic dysfunction and performed autonomic nervous system testing among 26 patients from New Zealand. After excluding three patients with diabetes mellitus, 83% had evidence of autonomic dysfunction; all patients had at least one autonomic symptom and 91% had more than two symptoms. We also found a higher rate of downbeat nystagmus (65%) than previously described in CANVAS. We confirmed that sensory findings on nerve conduction tests were consistent with a sensory ganglionopathy and describe two patients with loss of trigeminal sensation consistent with previous pathological descriptions of trigeminal sensory ganglionopathy. Our results suggest that autonomic dysfunction is a major feature of CANVAS. This has implications for the management of patients with CANVAS as the autonomic symptoms may be amenable to treatment. The findings also provide an important differential diagnosis from multiple system atrophy for patients who present with ataxia and autonomic failure.


International Journal of Stroke | 2018

Tenecteplase versus alteplase before endovascular thrombectomy (EXTEND-IA TNK): A multicenter, randomized, controlled study

Bruce C.V. Campbell; Peter Mitchell; Leonid Churilov; Nawaf Yassi; Timothy J. Kleinig; Bernard Yan; Richard Dowling; Steven Bush; Helen M. Dewey; Vincent Thijs; Marion Simpson; Mark Brooks; Hamed Asadi; Teddy Y. Wu; Darshan G. Shah; Tissa Wijeratne; Timothy Ang; Ferdinand Miteff; Christopher Levi; Martin Krause; Timothy Harrington; Kenneth Faulder; Brendan Steinfort; Peter L. Bailey; Henry Rice; Laetitia de Villiers; Rebecca Scroop; Wayne Collecutt; Andrew Wong; Alan Coulthard

Background and hypothesis Intravenous thrombolysis with alteplase remains standard care prior to thrombectomy for eligible patients within 4.5 h of ischemic stroke onset. However, alteplase only succeeds in reperfusing large vessel arterial occlusion prior to thrombectomy in a minority of patients. We hypothesized that tenecteplase is non-inferior to alteplase in achieving reperfusion at initial angiogram, when administered within 4.5 h of ischemic stroke onset, in patients planned to undergo endovascular therapy. Study design EXTEND-IA TNK is an investigator-initiated, phase II, multicenter, prospective, randomized, open-label, blinded-endpoint non-inferiority study. Eligibility requires a diagnosis of ischemic stroke within 4.5 h of stroke onset, pre-stroke modified Rankin Scale≤3 (no upper age limit), large vessel occlusion (internal carotid, basilar, or middle cerebral artery) on multimodal computed tomography and absence of contraindications to intravenous thrombolysis. Patients are randomized to either IV alteplase (0.9 mg/kg, max 90 mg) or tenecteplase (0.25 mg/kg, max 25 mg) prior to thrombectomy. Study outcomes The primary outcome measure is reperfusion on the initial catheter angiogram, assessed as modified treatment in cerebral infarction 2 b/3 or the absence of retrievable thrombus. Secondary outcomes include modified Rankin Scale at day 90 and favorable clinical response (reduction in National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale by ≥8 points or reaching 0–1) at day 3. Safety outcomes are death and symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02388061


Frontiers in Neurology | 2017

Endovascular thrombectomy for ischemic stroke increases disability-free survival, quality of life, and life expectancy and reduces cost

Bruce C.V. Campbell; Peter Mitchell; Leonid Churilov; Mahsa Keshtkaran; Keun-Sik Hong; Timothy J. Kleinig; Helen M. Dewey; Nawaf Yassi; Bernard Yan; Richard Dowling; Mark W. Parsons; Teddy Y. Wu; Mark Brooks; Marion Simpson; Ferdinand Miteff; Christopher Levi; Martin Krause; Timothy Harrington; Kenneth Faulder; Brendan Steinfort; Timothy Ang; Rebecca Scroop; P. Alan Barber; Ben McGuinness; Tissa Wijeratne; Thanh G. Phan; Winston Chong; Ronil V. Chandra; Christopher F. Bladin; Henry Rice

Background Endovascular thrombectomy improves functional outcome in large vessel occlusion ischemic stroke. We examined disability, quality of life, survival and acute care costs in the EXTEND-IA trial, which used CT-perfusion imaging selection. Methods Large vessel ischemic stroke patients with favorable CT-perfusion were randomized to endovascular thrombectomy after alteplase versus alteplase-only. Clinical outcome was prospectively measured using 90-day modified Rankin scale (mRS). Individual patient expected survival and net difference in Disability/Quality-adjusted life years (DALY/QALY) up to 15 years from stroke were modeled using age, sex, 90-day mRS, and utility scores. Level of care within the first 90 days was prospectively measured and used to estimate procedure and inpatient care costs (US


American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2017

Benign Enhancing Foramen Magnum Lesions: Clinical Report of a Newly Recognized Entity

Ben McGuinness; J.P. Morrison; Stefan Brew; M.W. Moriarty

reference year 2014). Results There were 70 patients, 35 in each arm, mean age 69, median NIHSS 15 (IQR 12–19). The median (IQR) disability-weighted utility score at 90 days was 0.65 (0.00–0.91) in the alteplase-only versus 0.91 (0.65–1.00) in the endovascular group (p = 0.005). Modeled life expectancy was greater in the endovascular versus alteplase-only group (median 15.6 versus 11.2 years, p = 0.02). The endovascular thrombectomy group had fewer simulated DALYs lost over 15 years [median (IQR) 5.5 (3.2–8.7) versus 8.9 (4.7–13.8), p = 0.02] and more QALY gained [median (IQR) 9.3 (4.2–13.1) versus 4.9 (0.3–8.5), p = 0.03]. Endovascular patients spent less time in hospital [median (IQR) 5 (3–11) days versus 8 (5–14) days, p = 0.04] and rehabilitation [median (IQR) 0 (0–28) versus 27 (0–65) days, p = 0.03]. The estimated inpatient costs in the first 90 days were less in the thrombectomy group (average US


Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice | 2016

Double-barrel Y-configuration stenting for flow diversion of a giant recurrent basilar apex aneurysm with the pipeline flex embolization device

Dale Ding; Robert M. Starke; Ben McGuinness; Stefan Brew

15,689 versus US


Practical Neurology | 2017

Imaging in acute ischaemic stroke: pearls and pitfalls

J Caldwell; Mks Heran; Ben McGuinness; Peter Barber

30,569, p = 0.008) offsetting the costs of interhospital transport and the thrombectomy procedure (average US


Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | 2015

Congestive myeloradiculopathy in a patient with Cowden syndrome.

Teddy Y. Wu; Ernest Willoughby; David O. Hutchinson; Stefan Brew; Ben McGuinness; Rebecca M. Lopes; Donald R. Love; Richard Roxburgh

10,515). The average saving per patient treated with thrombectomy was US


Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice | 2016

Embolization of a complex posterior fossa dural arteriovenous fistula with precipitating hydrophobic injectable liquid

Dale Ding; Ben McGuinness; Stefan Brew

4,365. Conclusion Thrombectomy patients with large vessel occlusion and salvageable tissue on CT-perfusion had reduced length of stay and overall costs to 90 days. There was evidence of clinically relevant improvement in long-term survival and quality of life. Clinical Trial Registration http://www.ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01492725 (registered 20/11/2011).

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Stefan Brew

Auckland City Hospital

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Bernard Yan

Royal Melbourne Hospital

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Leonid Churilov

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

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Kenneth Faulder

Royal North Shore Hospital

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