HIAT-2 for Prognosticating Outcomes After Endovascular Interventions in Stroke: Proving Once Again Sick People are Sick

A guest post by Rory Spiegel (@CaptainBasilEM) who blogs on nihilism and the art of doing nothing at emnerd.com.

Since the publication of IMS-3, SYNTHESIS and MR RESCUE in the NEJM earlier this year, proponents of endovascular interventions for acute ischemic stroke have hypothesized why these trials were universally negative. Among the various explanations, one of the most prominent was that the trial designs selected the wrong patients. In order to fully highlight the benefits of endovascular therapy it must be performed on large vessel occlusions with ischemic but viable brain tissue down stream. The authors of a recently published study in STROKE have suggested a solution for this very problem. With the publication of their derivation and validation cohorts of the second generation of the HIAT score, HIAT-2 score, they postulate this decision rule will help predict which patients will benefit from endovascular interventions. The second revision of the HIAT score incorporates the original 3 factors, age, NIHSS and blood glucose at presentation in addition to the ASPECT score of the initial non-contrast CT. As opposed to the initial iteration of HIAT (1 point allotted for each of the 3 factors), HIAT-2 is a 10-point scale (10 being most severe) with age, ASPECT score, NIHSS and blood glucose level relatively weighted in descending order of influence.

The score was retrospectively derived and validated from two prospectively gathered databases of patients who underwent endovascular treatment for acute ischemic stroke. Older patients, with increased NIHSS and more ischemic changes on their initial CT fared far worse than their younger less critically presenting counterparts. In patients with a HIAT-2 scores of 5 or greater, 80% had a mRS of >4 at 90 days. A HIAT-2 score of >7 resulted in 100% of patients having a mRS of >4 at 90 days. The authors conclude that since patients with a high HIAT-2 score had poor 90-day outcomes, endovascular interventions should be limited to patients with a HIAT-2 score of 5 or less.

Never mind that the HIAT-2 score is only moderately capable of identifying those with a poor outcome after endovascular intervention (AOC is only 0.73), the more egregious logical fallacy committed by these authors was to conclude that the HIAT-2 score will differentiate those who will benefit from an endovascular intervention from those who will not. HIAT-2 does nothing of the sort. It is merely a predictor of prognosis at 90 days. Older patients, with more severe strokes at presentation (both clinically and radiologically) will have a worse prognosis no matter what interventions are performed. Interestingly, if the HIAT-2 score is utilized as proposed by its authors, it would exclude the patients who were originally hypothesized to benefit from these endovascular interventions. Patients with symptoms severe enough (usually NIHSS 10 or greater) to be large vessel occlusions are the types of strokes, which lend themselves to endovascular interventions. These are the types of infarcts the HIAT-2 score would exclude from endovascular treatment options.

Finally, in the IMS-3 trial though the HIAT-2 score was not specifically measured, age, NIHSS and the ASPECT score were all recorded. 31% of the cohort was younger than 65, over half the cohort was ASPECT 8,9, or 10 and greater than 80% had a NIHSS at presentation of 19 or less. No benefit of endovascular treatment over tPA was seen in any of the subgroups that are the most heavily weighted components of the HIAT-2 score.

The HIAT-2 score would require prospective validation before it can be used clinically, but I argue that in its current form, HIAT-2 is unable to answer the question for which it was conceived. At present the best evidence we have demonstrates endovascular interventions are no better than tPA (and some would argue tPA is no better than placebo). More high quality trials are needed to identify if there is a subgroup of patients who may benefit from endovascular interventions but pseudoscience and logical fallacies do nothing to augment the knowledge we have gained so far.

“Optimizing Prediction Scores for Poor Outcome After Intra-Arterial Therapy in Anterior Circulation Acute Ischemic Stroke”
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23929748