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We have previously written about 'denominator fallacy' and its importance in the way that we report and interpret results, especially for endovascular treatment of acute stroke. 1 In most studies, the number of patients going for endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) is taken as the denominator and the number of these patients achieving a modified Rankin Scale (mRS) of 0-2 as the numerator. The number of patients taken for EVT is dependent on the overall set-up, the view of the interventionalists, economic considerations (in some jurisdictions), imaging criteria, and clinical criteria. Of these, imaging criteria probably play a key role: the more stringent the imaging criteria (taking only patients with a very small core, etc), the smaller the number of patients who will go for EVT and the higher the likelihood of good clinical outcome (as a percentage of patients undergoing EVT). However, the more stringent the criteria, the smaller the overall impact of the treatment on the population as a whole. I used examples to illustrate this concept in a previous editorial.
However, let us take this line of reasoning a step further.
We know that time is brain and that infarcts grow during the hyperacute phase. At time zero after onset of symptoms, the size of the infarct core is zero. At 24 hours after onset, most infarcts are fully grown. Therefore it is clear that between 0 and 24 hours infarcts grow. Based on available data, it is quite likely that the overall curve for infarct growth is not linear but logarithmic with infarct growth being greater early on. Thus, it is likely that the earlier the imaging is performed after onset of the stroke, the higher is the likelihood of favorable imaging. 2 If we had the ability to image 100 patients with M1 (middle cerebral artery, 1st segment) occlusion within 30-60 min of stroke onset, probably nearly all the patients would be eligible for EVT based on published and accepted criteria for small to...