Sjoerd F.M. Jenniskens
Radboud University Nijmegen
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JAMA Neurology | 2016
Puck S.S. Fransen; Olvert A. Berkhemer; Hester F. Lingsma; Debbie Beumer; Lucie A. van den Berg; Albert J. Yoo; Wouter J. Schonewille; Jan Albert Vos; Paul J. Nederkoorn; Marieke J.H. Wermer; Marianne A. A. van Walderveen; Julie Staals; Jeannette Hofmeijer; Jacques A. van Oostayen; Geert J. Lycklama à Nijeholt; Jelis Boiten; Patrick A. Brouwer; Bart J. Emmer; Sebastiaan F. de Bruijn; Lukas C. van Dijk; L. Jaap Kappelle; Rob H. Lo; Ewoud J. van Dijk; Joost de Vries; Paul L. M. de Kort; J. S. Peter van den Berg; Boudewijn A.A.M. van Hasselt; Leo A.M. Aerden; René J. Dallinga; Marieke C. Visser
IMPORTANCE Intra-arterial treatment (IAT) for acute ischemic stroke caused by intracranial arterial occlusion leads to improved functional outcome in patients treated within 6 hours after onset. The influence of treatment delay on treatment effect is not yet known. OBJECTIVE To evaluate the influence of time from stroke onset to the start of treatment and from stroke onset to reperfusion on the effect of IAT. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS The Multicenter Randomized Clinical Trial of Endovascular Treatment of Acute Ischemic Stroke in the Netherlands (MR CLEAN) was a multicenter, randomized clinical open-label trial of IAT vs no IAT in 500 patients. The time to the start of treatment was defined as the time from onset of symptoms to groin puncture (TOG). The time from onset of treatment to reperfusion (TOR) was defined as the time to reopening the vessel occlusion or the end of the procedure in cases for which reperfusion was not achieved. Data were collected from December 3, 2010, to June 3, 2014, and analyzed (intention to treat) from July 1, 2014, to September 19, 2015. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Main outcome was the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score for functional outcome (range, 0 [no symptoms] to 6 [death]). Multiple ordinal logistic regression analysis estimated the effect of treatment and tested for the interaction of time to randomization, TOG, and TOR with treatment. The effect of treatment as a risk difference on reaching independence (mRS score, 0-2) was computed as a function of TOG and TOR. Calculations were adjusted for age, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score, previous stroke, atrial fibrillation, diabetes mellitus, and intracranial arterial terminus occlusion. RESULTS Among 500 patients (58% male; median age, 67 years), the median TOG was 260 (interquartile range [IQR], 210-311) minutes; median TOR, 340 (IQR, 274-395) minutes. An interaction between TOR and treatment (P = .04) existed, but not between TOG and treatment (P = .26). The adjusted risk difference (95% CI) was 25.9% (8.3%-44.4%) when reperfusion was reached at 3 hours, 18.8% (6.6%-32.6%) at 4 hours, and 6.7% (0.4%-14.5%) at 6 hours. CONCLUSION AND RELEVANCE For every hour of reperfusion delay, the initially large benefit of IAT decreases; the absolute risk difference for a good outcome is reduced by 6% per hour of delay. Patients with acute ischemic stroke require immediate diagnostic workup and IAT in case of intracranial arterial vessel occlusion. TRIAL REGISTRATION trialregister.nl Identifier: NTR1804.
Stroke | 2015
Lucie A. van den Berg; Diederik L. H. Koelman; Olvert A. Berkhemer; Anouk D. Rozeman; Puck S.S. Fransen; Debbie Beumer; Diederik W.J. Dippel; Aad van der Lugt; Robert J. van Oostenbrugge; Wim H. van Zwam; Patrick A. Brouwer; Sjoerd F.M. Jenniskens; Jelis Boiten; Geert A. Lycklama a Nijeholt; Jan Albert Vos; Wouter J. Schonewille; Charles B. L. M. Majoie; Yvo B.W.E.M. Roos
Background and Purpose— Intra-arterial treatment (IAT) in patients with acute ischemic stroke (AIS) can be performed with or without general anesthesia (GA). Previous studies suggested that IAT without the use of GA (non-GA) is associated with better clinical outcome. Nevertheless, no consensus exists about the anesthetic management during IAT of AIS patients. This study investigates the association between type of anesthesia and clinical outcome in a large cohort of patients with AIS treated with IAT. Methods— All consecutive patients with AIS of the anterior circulation who received IAT between 2002 and 2013 in 16 Dutch hospitals were included in the study. Primary outcome was functional outcome on the modified Rankin Scale at discharge. Difference in primary outcome between GA and non-GA was estimated using multiple ordinal regression analysis, adjusting for age, stroke severity, occlusion of the internal carotid artery terminus, previous stroke, atrial fibrillation, and diabetes mellitus. Results— Three hundred forty-eight patients were included in the analysis; 70 patients received GA and 278 patients did not receive GA. Non-GA was significantly associated with good clinical outcome (odds ratio 2.1, 95% confidence interval 1.02–4.31). After adjusting for prespecified prognostic factors, the point estimate remained similar; statistical significance, however, was lost (odds ratio 1.9, 95% confidence interval 0.89–4.24). Conclusions— Our study suggests that patients with AIS of the anterior circulation undergoing IAT without GA have a higher probability of good clinical outcome compared with patients treated with general anesthesia.
Stroke | 2016
Olvert A. Berkhemer; Ivo G.H. Jansen; Debbie Beumer; Puck S.S. Fransen; Lucie A. van den Berg; Albert J. Yoo; Hester F. Lingsma; Marieke E.S. Sprengers; Sjoerd F.M. Jenniskens; Geert J. Lycklama à Nijeholt; Marianne A. A. van Walderveen; René van den Berg; Joseph C.J. Bot; Ludo F. M. Beenen; Anna M.M. Boers; Cornelis H. Slump; Yvo B.W.E.M. Roos; Robert J. van Oostenbrugge; Diederik W.J. Dippel; Aad van der Lugt; Wim H. van Zwam; Henk A. Marquering; Charles B. L. M. Majoie; Wouter J. Schonewille; J.A. Vos; Paul J. Nederkoorn; Marieke J.H. Wermer; Julie Staals; Jeannette Hofmeijer; Jacques A. van Oostayen
Background and Purpose— Recent randomized trials have proven the benefit of intra-arterial treatment (IAT) with retrievable stents in acute ischemic stroke. Patients with poor or absent collaterals (preexistent anastomoses to maintain blood flow in case of a primary vessel occlusion) may gain less clinical benefit from IAT. In this post hoc analysis, we aimed to assess whether the effect of IAT was modified by collateral status on baseline computed tomographic angiography in the Multicenter Randomized Clinical Trial of Endovascular Treatment of Acute Ischemic Stroke in the Netherlands (MR CLEAN). Methods— MR CLEAN was a multicenter, randomized trial of IAT versus no IAT. Primary outcome was the modified Rankin Scale at 90 days. The primary effect parameter was the adjusted common odds ratio for a shift in direction of a better outcome on the modified Rankin Scale. Collaterals were graded from 0 (absent) to 3 (good). We used multivariable ordinal logistic regression analysis with interaction terms to estimate treatment effect modification by collateral status. Results— We found a significant modification of treatment effect by collaterals (P=0.038). The strongest benefit (adjusted common odds ratio 3.2 [95% confidence intervals 1.7–6.2]) was found in patients with good collaterals (grade 3). The adjusted common odds ratio was 1.6 [95% confidence intervals 1.0–2.7] for moderate collaterals (grade 2), 1.2 [95% confidence intervals 0.7–2.3] for poor collaterals (grade 1), and 1.0 [95% confidence intervals 0.1–8.7] for patients with absent collaterals (grade 0). Conclusions— In MR CLEAN, baseline computed tomographic angiography collateral status modified the treatment effect. The benefit of IAT was greatest in patients with good collaterals on baseline computed tomographic angiography. Treatment benefit appeared less and may be absent in patients with absent or poor collaterals. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.trialregister.nl and http://www.controlled-trials.com. Unique identifier: (NTR)1804 and ISRCTN10888758, respectively.
Stroke | 2017
Maxim J.H.L. Mulder; S. Ergezen; Hester F. Lingsma; Olvert A. Berkhemer; Puck S.S. Fransen; Debbie Beumer; L.A. van den Berg; G.J. Lycklama à Nijeholt; Bart J. Emmer; H. B. van der Worp; P. J. Nederkoorn; Yvo B.W.E.M. Roos; R. J. van Oostenbrugge; W.H. van Zwam; Charles B. M. Majoie; A. van der Lugt; Diederik W.J. Dippel; Marieke J.H. Wermer; E.J. van Dijk; J.J.C. de Vries; Sjoerd F.M. Jenniskens
Background and Purpose— High blood pressure (BP) is associated with poor outcome and the occurrence of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage in acute ischemic stroke. Whether BP influences the benefit or safety of intra-arterial treatment (IAT) is not known. We aimed to assess the relation of BP with functional outcome, occurrence of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage and effect of IAT. Methods— This is a post hoc analysis of the MR CLEAN (Multicenter Randomized Clinical Trial of Endovascular Treatment of Acute Ischemic Stroke in the Netherlands). BP was measured at baseline, before IAT or stroke unit admission. We estimated the association of baseline BP with the score on the modified Rankin Scale at 90 days and safety parameters with ordinal and logistic regression analysis. Effect of BP on the effect of IAT was tested with multiplicative interaction terms. Results— Systolic BP (SBP) had the best correlation with functional outcome. This correlation was U-shaped; both low and high baseline SBP were associated with poor functional outcome. Higher SBP was associated with symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (adjusted odds ratio, 1.25 for every 10 mm Hg higher SBP [95% confidence interval, 1.09–1.44]). Between SBP and IAT, there was no interaction for functional outcome, symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage, or other safety parameters; the absolute benefit of IAT was evident for the whole SBP range. The same was found for diastolic BP. Conclusions— BP does not affect the benefit or safety of IAT in patients with acute ischemic stroke caused by proximal intracranial vessel occlusion. Our data provide no arguments to withhold or delay IAT based on BP. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.isrctn.com. Unique identifier: ISRCTN10888758.
Stroke | 2016
Kilian M. Treurniet; Albert J. Yoo; Olvert A. Berkhemer; Hester F. Lingsma; Anna M. M. Boers; Puck S.S. Fransen; Debbie Beumer; Lucie A. van den Berg; Marieke E.S. Sprengers; Sjoerd F.M. Jenniskens; Geert J. Lycklama à Nijeholt; Marianne A. A. van Walderveen; Joseph C.J. Bot; Ludo F. M. Beenen; René van den Berg; Wim H. van Zwam; Aad van der Lugt; Robert J. van Oostenbrugge; Diederik W.J. Dippel; Yvo B.W.E.M. Roos; Henk A. Marquering; Charles B. L. M. Majoie
Background and Purpose— A high clot burden score (CBS) is associated with favorable outcome after intravenous treatment for acute ischemic stroke. The added benefit of intra-arterial treatment might be less in these patients. The aim of this exploratory post hoc analysis was to assess the relation of CBS with neurological improvement and endovascular treatment effect. Methods— For 499 of 500 patients in the MR CLEAN study (Multicenter Randomized Clinical Trial of Endovascular Treatment for Acute Ischemic Stroke in the Netherlands), the CBS was determined. Ordinal logistic regression models with and without main baseline prognostic variables were used to assess the association between CBS (continuous or dichotomized at CBS of 6) and a shift toward better outcome on the modified Rankin Scale. The model without main baseline prognostic variables only included treatment allocation and CBS. Models with and without a multiplicative interaction term of CBS and treatment were compared using the &khgr;2 test to assess treatment effect modification by CBS. Results— Higher CBS was associated with a shift toward better outcome on the modified Rankin Scale; adjusted common odds ratio per point CBS was 1.12 (95% confidence interval, 1.04–1.20]. Dichotomized CBS had an adjusted common odds ratio of 1.67 (95% confidence interval, 1.12–2.51). Both effect estimates were slightly attenuated by adding baseline prognostic variables. The addition of the interaction terms did not significantly improve the fit of the models. There was a small and insignificant increase of intra-arterial treatment efficacy in the high CBS group. Conclusions— A higher CBS is associated with improved outcome and may be used as a prognostic marker. We found no evidence that CBS modifies the effect of intra-arterial treatment. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.trialregister.nl. Unique identifier: NTR1804. URL: http://www.controlled-trials.com. Unique identifier: ISRCTN10888758.
Urologic Oncology-seminars and Original Investigations | 2015
Willemien van den Bos; Berrend G. Muller; Daniel M. de Bruin; Andre Luis de Castro Abreu; Christian Chaussy; Jonathan A. Coleman; Antonio Finelli; Inderbir S. Gill; Mitchell E. Gross; Sjoerd F.M. Jenniskens; Frank Kahmann; M. Pilar Laguna-Pes; Ardeshir R. Rastinehad; Lucy Simmons; Tullio Sulser; Arnauld Villers; John F. Ward; Jean de la Rosette
INTRODUCTION Salvage ablative therapy (SAT) has been developed as a form of localized treatment for localized recurrence of prostate cancers following radiation therapy. To better address the utility of SAT, prospective clinical trials must address the aspects of accepted standards in the initial evaluation, treatment, follow-up, and outcomes in the oncology community. We undertook this study to achieve consensus on uniform standardized trial design for SAT trials. METHODS A literature search was performed and an international multidisciplinary group of experts was identified. A questionnaire was constructed and sent out to 71 participants in 3 consecutive rounds according to the Delphi method. The project was concluded with a face-to-face meeting in which the results were reviewed and conclusions were formulated. RESULTS Patients with recurrent disease after radiation therapy were considered candidates for a SAT trial using any ablation scenario performed with cryotherapy or high-intensity focused ultrasound. It is feasible to compare different sources of energy or to compare with historical data on salvage radical prostatectomy outcomes. The primary objective should be to assess the efficacy of the treatment for negative biopsy rate at 12 months. Secondary objectives should include safety parameters and quality-of-life assessment. Exclusion criteria should include evidence of local or distant metastases. The optimal biopsy strategy is image-guided targeted biopsies. Follow-up includes multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging, prostate-specific antigen level, and quality of life for at least 5 years. CONCLUSIONS A multidisciplinary board from international experts reached consensus on trial design for SAT in prostate cancer and provides a standard for designing a feasible SAT trial.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Ralph R. E. G. Geuskens; Jordi Borst; Marit Lucas; A. M. Merel Boers; Olvert A. Berkhemer; Yvo B.W.E.M. Roos; Marianne A. A. van Walderveen; Sjoerd F.M. Jenniskens; Wim H. van Zwam; Diederik W.J. Dippel; Charles B. L. M. Majoie; Henk A. Marquering; Clean trial investigators
Background CT perfusion (CTP) is used to estimate the extent of ischemic core and penumbra in patients with acute ischemic stroke. CTP reliability, however, is limited. This study aims to identify regions misclassified as ischemic core on CTP, using infarct on follow-up noncontrast CT. We aim to assess differences in volumetric and perfusion characteristics in these regions compared to areas that ended up as infarct on follow-up. Materials and Methods This study included 35 patients with >100 mm brain coverage CTP. CTP processing was performed using Philips software (IntelliSpace 7.0). Final infarct was automatically segmented on follow-up noncontrast CT and used as reference. CTP and follow-up noncontrast CT image data were registered. This allowed classification of ischemic lesion agreement (core on CTP: rMTT≥145%, aCBV<2.0 ml/100g and infarct on follow-up noncontrast CT) and misclassified ischemic core (core on CTP, not identified on follow-up noncontrast CT) regions. False discovery ratio (FDR), defined as misclassified ischemic core volume divided by total CTP ischemic core volume, was calculated. Absolute and relative CTP parameters (CBV, CBF, and MTT) were calculated for both misclassified CTP ischemic core and ischemic lesion agreement regions and compared using paired rank-sum tests. Results Median total CTP ischemic core volume was 49.7ml (IQR:29.9ml-132ml); median misclassified ischemic core volume was 30.4ml (IQR:20.9ml-77.0ml). Median FDR between patients was 62% (IQR:49%-80%). Median relative mean transit time was 243% (IQR:198%-289%) and 342% (IQR:249%-432%) for misclassified and ischemic lesion agreement regions, respectively. Median absolute cerebral blood volume was 1.59 (IQR:1.43–1.79) ml/100g (P<0.01) and 1.38 (IQR:1.15–1.49) ml/100g (P<0.01) for misclassified ischemic core and ischemic lesion agreement, respectively. All CTP parameter values differed significantly. Conclusion For all patients a considerable region of the CTP ischemic core is misclassified. CTP parameters significantly differed between ischemic lesion agreement and misclassified CTP ischemic core, suggesting that CTP analysis may benefit from revisions.
International Journal of Stroke | 2017
Maxim J.H.L. Mulder; Olvert A. Berkhemer; Puck S.S. Fransen; L.A. van den Berg; Hester F. Lingsma; H.M. den Hertog; Julie Staals; Sjoerd F.M. Jenniskens; R. J. van Oostenbrugge; W.H. van Zwam; Charles B. L. M. Majoie; A. van der Lugt; Diederik W.J. Dippel; M.C.P. Investigators
Background and purpose In patients with acute ischemic stroke who receive antiplatelet treatment, uncertainty exists about the effect and safety of intra-arterial treatment. Our aim was to study whether intra-arterial treatment in patients with prior antiplatelet treatment is safe and whether prior antiplatelet treatment modifies treatment effect. Methods All 500 MR CLEAN patients were included. We estimated the effect of intra-arterial treatment with ordinal logistic regression analysis, and tested for interaction of antiplatelet treatment with intra-arterial treatment on outcome. Furthermore, safety parameters and serious adverse events were analyzed. Results The 144 patients (29%) on antiplatelet treatment were older, more often male, and had more vascular comorbidity. Intra-arterial treatment effect size after adjustments in antiplatelet treatment patients was 1.7 (95% confidence interval 0.9–3.2), and in no antiplatelet treatment patients 1.8 (95% confidence interval: 1.2–2.6). There was no statistically or clinically significant interaction between prior antiplatelet treatment and the relative effect of intra-arterial treatment (p = 0.78). However, in patients on antiplatelet treatment, the effect of successful reperfusion on functional outcome in the intervention arm of the trial was doubled: the absolute risk difference for favorable outcome after successful reperfusion in patients on prior antiplatelet treatment was 39% versus 18% in patients not on prior antiplatelet treatment (Pinteraction = 0.025). Patients on antiplatelet treatment more frequently had a symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (15%) compared to patients without antiplatelet treatment (4%), without differences between the control and intervention arm. Conclusions Prior treatment with antiplatelet agents did not modify the effect of intra-arterial treatment in patients with acute ischemic stroke presenting with an intracranial large vessel occlusion. There were no safety concerns. In patients with reperfusion, antiplatelet agents may improve functional outcome.
Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2017
Tim J. van Oostenbrugge; Johan F. Langenhuijsen; Christiaan G. Overduin; Sjoerd F.M. Jenniskens; Peter Mulders; Jurgen J. Fütterer
PURPOSE To assess the feasibility of percutaneous magnetic resonance (MR) imaging-guided cryoablation of small renal masses (SRMs) in a 3-T environment and to evaluate intraprocedural imaging, procedural safety, and initial outcomes. MATERIALS AND METHODS The analysis included 9 patients (4 men; median age, 72 y; range, 70-82 y) with 9 SRMs (diameter, 12-30 mm). Lesions underwent biopsy, and cryoneedles were inserted under ultrasound guidance. Verification of needle positions and ice-ball monitoring were performed by T1-weighted volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination and T2-weighted half-Fourier acquired single-shot turbo spin-echo sequences. On image analysis, needle positioning was considered appropriate if the target lesion border was visible, the needle tip was inside the target lesion, and the ice ball was expected to cover the target lesion with a 5-mm margin. If these criteria could not be assessed, imaging was considered inadequate. Technical success was defined as tumor coverage with a 5-mm margin and no residual disease on 1-mo follow-up MR imaging. RESULTS Median total procedure time was 170 min (range, 135-193 min). Intraoperative imaging allowed adequate needle visualization in 67% of acquired scans (4 of 7 T1-weighted and 6 of 8 T2-weighted). Appropriate positioning of two or three needles used for each procedure was confirmed in all cases on T1- or T2-weighted imaging. Ice-ball formation was adequately visualized in all patients. Technical success rate was 100%. No local recurrences were detected on follow-up imaging at a median of 12 mo (range, 3-22 mo). CONCLUSIONS Percutaneous MR-guided cryoablation of SRMs in a 3-T MR imaging environment is safe and feasible, showing adequate intraoperative imaging capabilities with promising short-term clinical outcomes.
Contemporary clinical trials communications | 2017
Martin Reinhardt; Philipp Brandmaier; Daniel Seider; Marina Kolesnik; Sjoerd F.M. Jenniskens; Roberto Blanco Sequeiros; Martin Eibisberger; Philip Voglreiter; Ronan Flanagan; Panchatcharam Mariappan; Harald Busse; Michael Moche
Introduction Radio-frequency ablation (RFA) is a promising minimal-invasive treatment option for early liver cancer, however monitoring or predicting the size of the resulting tissue necrosis during the RFA-procedure is a challenging task, potentially resulting in a significant rate of under- or over treatments. Currently there is no reliable lesion size prediction method commercially available. Objectives ClinicIMPPACT is designed as multicenter-, prospective-, non-randomized clinical trial to evaluate the accuracy and efficiency of innovative planning and simulation software. 60 patients with early liver cancer will be included at four European clinical institutions and treated with the same RFA system. The preinterventional imaging datasets will be used for computational planning of the RFA treatment. All ablations will be simulated simultaneously to the actual RFA procedure, using the software environment developed in this project. The primary outcome measure is the comparison of the simulated ablation zones with the true lesions shown in follow-up imaging after one month, to assess accuracy of the lesion prediction. Discussion This unique multicenter clinical trial aims at the clinical integration of a dedicated software solution to accurately predict lesion size and shape after radiofrequency ablation of liver tumors. Accelerated and optimized workflow integration, and real-time intraoperative image processing, as well as inclusion of patient specific information, e.g. organ perfusion and registration of the real RFA needle position might make the introduced software a powerful tool for interventional radiologists to optimize patient outcomes.