Browsing by Author "Ringleb, Peter A. (7003924176)"
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Publication Intravenous Thrombolysis 4.5–9 Hours After Stroke Onset: A Cohort Study from the TRISP Collaboration(2023) ;Altersberger, Valerian L. (57209477713) ;Sibolt, Gerli (55363308000) ;Enz, Lukas S. (56695352800) ;Hametner, Christian (26664467800) ;Scheitz, Jan F. (40462239700) ;Henon, Hilde (7003850368) ;Bigliardi, Guido (57202572448) ;Strambo, Davide (54279664800) ;Martinez-Majander, Nicolas (56809467700) ;Stolze, Lotte J. (57223130564) ;Heldner, Mirjam R. (21934241600) ;Grisendi, Ilaria (36996904200) ;Jovanovic, Dejana R. (55419203900) ;Bejot, Yannick (14038743100) ;Pezzini, Alessandro (7003431197) ;Leker, Ronen R. (36884947500) ;Kägi, Georg (57190871612) ;Wegener, Susanne (8501456600) ;Cereda, Carlo W. (8832645000) ;Ntaios, Georges (16426036800) ;De Marchis, Gian Marco (8842483700) ;Bonati, Leo H. (57219301285) ;Psychogios, Marios (35307908200) ;Lyrer, Philippe (7003999382) ;Räty, Silja (56702728900) ;Tiainen, Marjaana (56219131200) ;Wouters, Anke (56336146800) ;Caparros, François (56905436600) ;Heyse, Miriam (57215080763) ;Erdur, Hebun (55323042800) ;Padjen, Visnja (55605274200) ;Zedde, Marialuisa (25642146100) ;Arnold, Marcel (35588830700) ;Nederkoorn, Paul J. (56124069700) ;Michel, Patrik (7202280440) ;Zini, Andrea (57879430100) ;Cordonnier, Charlotte (18436376100) ;Nolte, Christian H. (55637553300) ;Ringleb, Peter A. (7003924176) ;Curtze, Sami (6506485992) ;Engelter, Stefan T. (6603761832)Gensicke, Henrik (36554060500)Objective: To investigate the safety and effectiveness of intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) >4.5–9 hours after stroke onset, and the relevance of advanced neuroimaging for patient selection. Methods: Prospective multicenter cohort study from the ThRombolysis in Ischemic Stroke Patients (TRISP) collaboration. Outcomes were symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage, poor 3-month functional outcome (modified Rankin scale 3–6) and mortality. We compared: (i) IVT >4.5–9 hours versus 0–4.5 hours after stroke onset and (ii) within the >4.5–9 hours group baseline advanced neuroimaging (computed tomography perfusion, magnetic resonance perfusion or magnetic resonance diffusion-weighted imaging fluid-attenuated inversion recovery) versus non-advanced neuroimaging. Results: Of 15,827 patients, 663 (4.2%) received IVT >4.5–9 hours and 15,164 (95.8%) within 4.5 hours after stroke onset. The main baseline characteristics were evenly distributed between both groups. Time of stroke onset was known in 74.9% of patients treated between >4.5 and 9 hours. Using propensity score weighted binary logistic regression analysis (onset-to-treatment time >4.5–9 hours vs onset-to-treatment time 0–4.5 hours), the probability of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (ORadjusted 0.80, 95% CI 0.53–1.17), poor functional outcome (ORadjusted 1.01, 95% CI 0.83–1.22), and mortality (ORadjusted 0.80, 95% CI 0.61–1.04) did not differ significantly between both groups. In patients treated between >4.5 and 9 hours, the use of advanced neuroimaging was associated with a 50% lower mortality compared with non-advanced imaging only (9.9% vs 19.7%; ORadjusted 0.51, 95% CI 0.33–0.79). Interpretation: This study showed no evidence in difference of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage, poor outcome, and mortality in selected stroke patients treated with IVT between >4.5 and 9 hours after stroke onset compared with those treated within 4.5 hours. Advanced neuroimaging for patient selection was associated with lower mortality. ANN NEUROL 2023;94:309–320. © 2023 The Authors. Annals of Neurology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Neurological Association. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Intravenous Thrombolysis 4.5–9 Hours After Stroke Onset: A Cohort Study from the TRISP Collaboration(2023) ;Altersberger, Valerian L. (57209477713) ;Sibolt, Gerli (55363308000) ;Enz, Lukas S. (56695352800) ;Hametner, Christian (26664467800) ;Scheitz, Jan F. (40462239700) ;Henon, Hilde (7003850368) ;Bigliardi, Guido (57202572448) ;Strambo, Davide (54279664800) ;Martinez-Majander, Nicolas (56809467700) ;Stolze, Lotte J. (57223130564) ;Heldner, Mirjam R. (21934241600) ;Grisendi, Ilaria (36996904200) ;Jovanovic, Dejana R. (55419203900) ;Bejot, Yannick (14038743100) ;Pezzini, Alessandro (7003431197) ;Leker, Ronen R. (36884947500) ;Kägi, Georg (57190871612) ;Wegener, Susanne (8501456600) ;Cereda, Carlo W. (8832645000) ;Ntaios, Georges (16426036800) ;De Marchis, Gian Marco (8842483700) ;Bonati, Leo H. (57219301285) ;Psychogios, Marios (35307908200) ;Lyrer, Philippe (7003999382) ;Räty, Silja (56702728900) ;Tiainen, Marjaana (56219131200) ;Wouters, Anke (56336146800) ;Caparros, François (56905436600) ;Heyse, Miriam (57215080763) ;Erdur, Hebun (55323042800) ;Padjen, Visnja (55605274200) ;Zedde, Marialuisa (25642146100) ;Arnold, Marcel (35588830700) ;Nederkoorn, Paul J. (56124069700) ;Michel, Patrik (7202280440) ;Zini, Andrea (57879430100) ;Cordonnier, Charlotte (18436376100) ;Nolte, Christian H. (55637553300) ;Ringleb, Peter A. (7003924176) ;Curtze, Sami (6506485992) ;Engelter, Stefan T. (6603761832)Gensicke, Henrik (36554060500)Objective: To investigate the safety and effectiveness of intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) >4.5–9 hours after stroke onset, and the relevance of advanced neuroimaging for patient selection. Methods: Prospective multicenter cohort study from the ThRombolysis in Ischemic Stroke Patients (TRISP) collaboration. Outcomes were symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage, poor 3-month functional outcome (modified Rankin scale 3–6) and mortality. We compared: (i) IVT >4.5–9 hours versus 0–4.5 hours after stroke onset and (ii) within the >4.5–9 hours group baseline advanced neuroimaging (computed tomography perfusion, magnetic resonance perfusion or magnetic resonance diffusion-weighted imaging fluid-attenuated inversion recovery) versus non-advanced neuroimaging. Results: Of 15,827 patients, 663 (4.2%) received IVT >4.5–9 hours and 15,164 (95.8%) within 4.5 hours after stroke onset. The main baseline characteristics were evenly distributed between both groups. Time of stroke onset was known in 74.9% of patients treated between >4.5 and 9 hours. Using propensity score weighted binary logistic regression analysis (onset-to-treatment time >4.5–9 hours vs onset-to-treatment time 0–4.5 hours), the probability of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (ORadjusted 0.80, 95% CI 0.53–1.17), poor functional outcome (ORadjusted 1.01, 95% CI 0.83–1.22), and mortality (ORadjusted 0.80, 95% CI 0.61–1.04) did not differ significantly between both groups. In patients treated between >4.5 and 9 hours, the use of advanced neuroimaging was associated with a 50% lower mortality compared with non-advanced imaging only (9.9% vs 19.7%; ORadjusted 0.51, 95% CI 0.33–0.79). Interpretation: This study showed no evidence in difference of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage, poor outcome, and mortality in selected stroke patients treated with IVT between >4.5 and 9 hours after stroke onset compared with those treated within 4.5 hours. Advanced neuroimaging for patient selection was associated with lower mortality. ANN NEUROL 2023;94:309–320. © 2023 The Authors. Annals of Neurology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Neurological Association. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Intravenous thrombolysis and platelet count(2018) ;Gensicke, Henrik (36554060500) ;Al Sultan, Abdulaziz S. (57191270996) ;Strbian, Daniel (8769093300) ;Hametner, Christian (26664467800) ;Zinkstok, Sanne M. (35294364600) ;Moulin, Solène (42761770600) ;Bill, Olivier (36542277100) ;Zini, Andrea (57879430100) ;Padjen, Visnja (55605274200) ;Kägi, Georg (57190871612) ;Pezzini, Alessandro (7003431197) ;Seiffge, David J. (36633290700) ;Traenka, Christopher (36603779300) ;Räty, Silja (56702728900) ;Amiri, Hemasse (35726507100) ;Zonneveld, Thomas P. (56586014300) ;Lachenmeier, Romina (57204014025) ;Polymeris, Alexandros (57190738259) ;Roos, Yvo B. (7005626073) ;Gumbinger, Christoph (26644936900) ;Jovanovic, Dejana R. (55419203900) ;Curtze, Sami (6506485992) ;Sibolt, Gerli (55363308000) ;Vandelli, Laura (56893519500) ;Ringleb, Peter A. (7003924176) ;Leys, Didier (26324692700) ;Cordonnier, Charlotte (18436376100) ;Michel, Patrik (7202280440) ;Lyrer, Philippe A. (7003999382) ;Peters, Nils (57219322529) ;Tatlisumak, Turgut (57202772070) ;Nederkoorn, Paul J. (56124069700)Engelter, Stefan T. (6603761832)Objective To study the effect of platelet count (PC) on bleeding risk and outcome in stroke patients treatedwith IV thrombolysis (IVT) and to explore whether withholding IVT in PC < 100 ×times; 109/L is supported. Methods In this prospective multicenter, IVT register-based study, we compared PC with symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (sICH; Second European-Australasian Acute Stroke Study [ECASS II] criteria), poor outcome (modified Rankin Scale score 3-6), andmortality at 3 months. PC was used as a continuous and categorical variable distinguishing thrombocytopenia (<150 × 109/L), thrombocytosis (>450 × 109/L), and normal PC (150-450 × 109/L [reference group]). Moreover, PC< 100× 109/L was compared to PC = 100 × 109/L.Unadjusted and adjusted odds ratios (ORs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) from the logistic regression models were calculated. Results Among 7,533 IVT-treated stroke patients, 6,830 (90.7%) had normal PC, 595 (7.9%) had thrombocytopenia, and 108 (1.4%) had thrombocytosis. Decreasing PC (every 10 × 109/L) was associated with increasing risk of sICH (ORadjusted 1.03, 95% CI 1.02-1.05) but decreasing risk of poor outcome (ORadjusted 0.99, 95% CI 0.98-0.99) and mortality (ORadjusted 0.98, 95% CI 0.98-0.99). The risk of sICH was higher in patients with thrombocytopenic than in patients with normal PC (ORadjusted 1.73, 95% CI 1.24-2.43). However, the risk of poor outcome (ORadjusted 0.89, 95% CI 0.39-1.97) and mortality (ORadjusted 1.09, 95% CI 0.83-1.44) did not differ significantly. Thrombocytosis was associated with mortality (ORadjusted 2.02, 95% CI 1.21-3.37). Fortyfour (0.3%) patients had PC < 100 × 109/L. Their risks of sICH (ORunadjusted 1.56, 95% CI 0.48-5.07), poor outcome (ORadjusted 1.63, 95% CI 0.82-3.24), and mortality (ORadjusted 1.38, 95% CI 0.64-2.98) did not differ significantly from those of patients with PC = 100 × 109/L. Conclusion Lower PC was associated with increased risk of sICH, while higher PC indicated increased mortality. Our data suggest that PC modifies outcome and complications in individual patients, while withholding IVT in all patients with PC < 100 × 109/L is challenged. Copyright © 2018 American Academy of Neurology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Prior Dual Antiplatelet Therapy and Thrombolysis in Acute Stroke(2020) ;Altersberger, Valerian L. (57209477713) ;Sturzenegger, Rolf (50562201000) ;Räty, Silja (56702728900) ;Hametner, Christian (26664467800) ;Scheitz, Jan F. (40462239700) ;Moulin, Solène (42761770600) ;van den Berg, Sophie A. (57209849710) ;Zini, Andrea (57879430100) ;Nannoni, Stefania (7801637186) ;Heldner, Mirjam R. (21934241600) ;Jovanovic, Dejana R. (55419203900) ;Martinez-Majander, Nicolas (56809467700) ;Tiainen, Marjaana (56219131200) ;Valkonen, Kati (56411849200) ;Berberich, Anne (57202288254) ;Erdur, Hebun (55323042800) ;Cordonnier, Charlotte (18436376100) ;Peters, Nils (57219322529) ;Gopisingh, Kiran M. (57218396277) ;Bigliardi, Guido (57202572448) ;Strambo, Davide (54279664800) ;De Marchis, Gian M. (8842483700) ;Ntaios, George (16426036800) ;Cereda, Carlo W. (8832645000) ;Wegener, Susanne (8501456600) ;Kägi, Georg (57190871612) ;Pezzini, Alessandro (7003431197) ;Padjen, Visnja (55605274200) ;Arnold, Marcel (35588830700) ;Michel, Patrik (7202280440) ;Vandelli, Laura (56893519500) ;Nederkoorn, Paul J. (56124069700) ;Leys, Didier (26324692700) ;Nolte, Christian H. (55637553300) ;Ringleb, Peter A. (7003924176) ;Curtze, Sami (6506485992) ;Engelter, Stefan T. (6603761832)Gensicke, Henrik (36554060500)[No abstract available] - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Prior Dual Antiplatelet Therapy and Thrombolysis in Acute Stroke(2020) ;Altersberger, Valerian L. (57209477713) ;Sturzenegger, Rolf (50562201000) ;Räty, Silja (56702728900) ;Hametner, Christian (26664467800) ;Scheitz, Jan F. (40462239700) ;Moulin, Solène (42761770600) ;van den Berg, Sophie A. (57209849710) ;Zini, Andrea (57879430100) ;Nannoni, Stefania (7801637186) ;Heldner, Mirjam R. (21934241600) ;Jovanovic, Dejana R. (55419203900) ;Martinez-Majander, Nicolas (56809467700) ;Tiainen, Marjaana (56219131200) ;Valkonen, Kati (56411849200) ;Berberich, Anne (57202288254) ;Erdur, Hebun (55323042800) ;Cordonnier, Charlotte (18436376100) ;Peters, Nils (57219322529) ;Gopisingh, Kiran M. (57218396277) ;Bigliardi, Guido (57202572448) ;Strambo, Davide (54279664800) ;De Marchis, Gian M. (8842483700) ;Ntaios, George (16426036800) ;Cereda, Carlo W. (8832645000) ;Wegener, Susanne (8501456600) ;Kägi, Georg (57190871612) ;Pezzini, Alessandro (7003431197) ;Padjen, Visnja (55605274200) ;Arnold, Marcel (35588830700) ;Michel, Patrik (7202280440) ;Vandelli, Laura (56893519500) ;Nederkoorn, Paul J. (56124069700) ;Leys, Didier (26324692700) ;Nolte, Christian H. (55637553300) ;Ringleb, Peter A. (7003924176) ;Curtze, Sami (6506485992) ;Engelter, Stefan T. (6603761832)Gensicke, Henrik (36554060500)[No abstract available] - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Safety of thrombolysis in stroke mimics: Results from a multicenter cohort study(2013) ;Zinkstok, Sanne M. (35294364600) ;Engelter, Stefan T. (6603761832) ;Gensicke, Henrik (36554060500) ;Lyrer, Philippe A. (7003999382) ;Ringleb, Peter A. (7003924176) ;Artto, Ville (55938125500) ;Putaala, Jukka (26531906100) ;Haapaniemi, Elena (6602783096) ;Tatlisumak, Turgut (55166546900) ;Chen, Yaohua (52463287800) ;Leys, Didier (26324692700) ;Sarikaya, Hakan (56259482700) ;Michel, P. (7202280440) ;Odier, Céline (26039465700) ;Berrouschot, Jörg (6701763644) ;Arnold, Marcel (35588830700) ;Heldner, Mirjam R. (21934241600) ;Zini, Andrea (57879430100) ;Fioravanti, Valentina (36445653300) ;Padjen, Visnja (55605274200) ;Beslac-Bumbasirevic, Ljiljana (6506489179) ;Pezzini, Alessandro (7003431197) ;Roos, Yvo B. (7005626073)Nederkoorn, Paul J. (56124069700)Background and Purpose-Intravenous thrombolysis for acute ischemic stroke is beneficial within 4.5 hours of symptom onset, but the effect rapidly decreases over time, necessitating quick diagnostic in-hospital work-up. Initial time strain occasionally results in treatment of patients with an alternate diagnosis (stroke mimics). We investigated whether intravenous thrombolysis is safe in these patients. Methods-In this multicenter observational cohort study containing 5581 consecutive patients treated with intravenous thrombolysis, we determined the frequency and the clinical characteristics of stroke mimics. For safety, we compared the symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (European Cooperative Acute Stroke Study II [ECASS-II] definition) rate of stroke mimics with ischemic strokes. Results-One hundred stroke mimics were identified, resulting in a frequency of 1.8% (95% confidence interval, 1.5-2.2). Patients with a stroke mimic were younger, more often female, and had fewer risk factors except smoking and previous stroke or transient ischemic attack. The symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage rate in stroke mimics was 1.0% (95% confidence interval, 0.0-5.0) compared with 7.9% (95% confidence interval, 7.2-8.7) in ischemic strokes. Conclusions-In experienced stroke centers, among patients treated with intravenous thrombolysis, only a few had a final diagnosis other than stroke. The complication rate in these stroke mimics was low. © 2013 American Heart Association, Inc. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Safety of thrombolysis in stroke mimics: Results from a multicenter cohort study(2013) ;Zinkstok, Sanne M. (35294364600) ;Engelter, Stefan T. (6603761832) ;Gensicke, Henrik (36554060500) ;Lyrer, Philippe A. (7003999382) ;Ringleb, Peter A. (7003924176) ;Artto, Ville (55938125500) ;Putaala, Jukka (26531906100) ;Haapaniemi, Elena (6602783096) ;Tatlisumak, Turgut (55166546900) ;Chen, Yaohua (52463287800) ;Leys, Didier (26324692700) ;Sarikaya, Hakan (56259482700) ;Michel, P. (7202280440) ;Odier, Céline (26039465700) ;Berrouschot, Jörg (6701763644) ;Arnold, Marcel (35588830700) ;Heldner, Mirjam R. (21934241600) ;Zini, Andrea (57879430100) ;Fioravanti, Valentina (36445653300) ;Padjen, Visnja (55605274200) ;Beslac-Bumbasirevic, Ljiljana (6506489179) ;Pezzini, Alessandro (7003431197) ;Roos, Yvo B. (7005626073)Nederkoorn, Paul J. (56124069700)Background and Purpose-Intravenous thrombolysis for acute ischemic stroke is beneficial within 4.5 hours of symptom onset, but the effect rapidly decreases over time, necessitating quick diagnostic in-hospital work-up. Initial time strain occasionally results in treatment of patients with an alternate diagnosis (stroke mimics). We investigated whether intravenous thrombolysis is safe in these patients. Methods-In this multicenter observational cohort study containing 5581 consecutive patients treated with intravenous thrombolysis, we determined the frequency and the clinical characteristics of stroke mimics. For safety, we compared the symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (European Cooperative Acute Stroke Study II [ECASS-II] definition) rate of stroke mimics with ischemic strokes. Results-One hundred stroke mimics were identified, resulting in a frequency of 1.8% (95% confidence interval, 1.5-2.2). Patients with a stroke mimic were younger, more often female, and had fewer risk factors except smoking and previous stroke or transient ischemic attack. The symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage rate in stroke mimics was 1.0% (95% confidence interval, 0.0-5.0) compared with 7.9% (95% confidence interval, 7.2-8.7) in ischemic strokes. Conclusions-In experienced stroke centers, among patients treated with intravenous thrombolysis, only a few had a final diagnosis other than stroke. The complication rate in these stroke mimics was low. © 2013 American Heart Association, Inc. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Thrombolysis in stroke patients with elevated inflammatory markers(2022) ;Altersberger, Valerian L. (57209477713) ;Enz, Lukas S. (56695352800) ;Sibolt, Gerli (55363308000) ;Hametner, Christian (26664467800) ;Nannoni, Stefania (7801637186) ;Heldner, Mirjam R. (21934241600) ;Stolp, Jeffrey (57253109700) ;Jovanovic, Dejana R. (55419203900) ;Zini, Andrea (57879430100) ;Pezzini, Alessandro (7003431197) ;Wegener, Susanne (8501456600) ;Cereda, Carlo W. (8832645000) ;Ntaios, George (16426036800) ;Räty, Silja (56702728900) ;Gumbinger, Christoph (26644936900) ;Heyse, Miriam (57215080763) ;Polymeris, Alexandros A. (57190738259) ;Zietz, Annaelle (57337112000) ;Schaufelbuehl, Anna (57712830700) ;Strambo, Davide (54279664800) ;Padlina, Giovanna (57218393322) ;Slavova, Nedelina (54991015100) ;Tiainen, Marjaana (56219131200) ;Valkonen, Kati (56411849200) ;Velzen, Twan J. van (57712219900) ;Bigliardi, Guido (57202572448) ;Stanarcevic, Predrag (55353773400) ;Magoni, Mauro (6602154383) ;Luft, Andreas (26643069800) ;Bejot, Yannick (14038743100) ;Vandelli, Laura (56893519500) ;Padjen, Visnja (55605274200) ;Nederkoorn, Paul J. (56124069700) ;Arnold, Marcel (35588830700) ;Michel, Patrik (7202280440) ;Ringleb, Peter A. (7003924176) ;Curtze, Sami (6506485992) ;Engelter, Stefan T. (6603761832)Gensicke, Henrik (36554060500)Objective: To investigate the prognostic value of white blood cell count (WBC) on functional outcome, mortality and bleeding risk in stroke patients treated with intravenous thrombolysis (IVT). Methods: In this prospective multicenter study from the TRISP registry, we assessed the association between WBC on admission and 3-month poor outcome (modified Rankin Scale 3–6), mortality and occurrence of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (sICH; ECASS-II-criteria) in IVT-treated stroke patients. WBC was used as continuous and categorical variable distinguishing leukocytosis (WBC > 10 × 109/l) and leukopenia (WBC < 4 × 109/l). We calculated unadjusted/ adjusted odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals (OR [95% CI]) with logistic regression models. In a subgroup, we analyzed the association of combined leukocytosis and elevated C-reactive protein (CRP > 10 mg/l) on outcomes. Results: Of 10,813 IVT-treated patients, 2527 had leukocytosis, 112 leukopenia and 8174 normal WBC. Increasing WBC (by 1 × 109/l) predicted poor outcome (ORadjusted 1.04[1.02–1.06]) but not mortality and sICH. Leukocytosis was independently associated with poor outcome (ORadjusted 1.48[1.29–1.69]) and mortality (ORadjusted 1.60[1.35–1.89]) but not with sICH (ORadjusted 1.17[0.94–1.45]). Leukopenia did not predict any outcome. In a subgroup, combined leukocytosis and elevated CRP had the strongest association with poor outcome (ORadjusted 2.26[1.76–2.91]) and mortality (ORadjusted 2.43[1.86–3.16]) when compared to combined normal WBC and CRP. Conclusion: In IVT-treated patients, leukocytosis independently predicted poor functional outcome and death. Bleeding complications after IVT were not independently associated with leukocytosis. © 2022, The Author(s). - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Thrombolysis in stroke patients with elevated inflammatory markers(2022) ;Altersberger, Valerian L. (57209477713) ;Enz, Lukas S. (56695352800) ;Sibolt, Gerli (55363308000) ;Hametner, Christian (26664467800) ;Nannoni, Stefania (7801637186) ;Heldner, Mirjam R. (21934241600) ;Stolp, Jeffrey (57253109700) ;Jovanovic, Dejana R. (55419203900) ;Zini, Andrea (57879430100) ;Pezzini, Alessandro (7003431197) ;Wegener, Susanne (8501456600) ;Cereda, Carlo W. (8832645000) ;Ntaios, George (16426036800) ;Räty, Silja (56702728900) ;Gumbinger, Christoph (26644936900) ;Heyse, Miriam (57215080763) ;Polymeris, Alexandros A. (57190738259) ;Zietz, Annaelle (57337112000) ;Schaufelbuehl, Anna (57712830700) ;Strambo, Davide (54279664800) ;Padlina, Giovanna (57218393322) ;Slavova, Nedelina (54991015100) ;Tiainen, Marjaana (56219131200) ;Valkonen, Kati (56411849200) ;Velzen, Twan J. van (57712219900) ;Bigliardi, Guido (57202572448) ;Stanarcevic, Predrag (55353773400) ;Magoni, Mauro (6602154383) ;Luft, Andreas (26643069800) ;Bejot, Yannick (14038743100) ;Vandelli, Laura (56893519500) ;Padjen, Visnja (55605274200) ;Nederkoorn, Paul J. (56124069700) ;Arnold, Marcel (35588830700) ;Michel, Patrik (7202280440) ;Ringleb, Peter A. (7003924176) ;Curtze, Sami (6506485992) ;Engelter, Stefan T. (6603761832)Gensicke, Henrik (36554060500)Objective: To investigate the prognostic value of white blood cell count (WBC) on functional outcome, mortality and bleeding risk in stroke patients treated with intravenous thrombolysis (IVT). Methods: In this prospective multicenter study from the TRISP registry, we assessed the association between WBC on admission and 3-month poor outcome (modified Rankin Scale 3–6), mortality and occurrence of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (sICH; ECASS-II-criteria) in IVT-treated stroke patients. WBC was used as continuous and categorical variable distinguishing leukocytosis (WBC > 10 × 109/l) and leukopenia (WBC < 4 × 109/l). We calculated unadjusted/ adjusted odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals (OR [95% CI]) with logistic regression models. In a subgroup, we analyzed the association of combined leukocytosis and elevated C-reactive protein (CRP > 10 mg/l) on outcomes. Results: Of 10,813 IVT-treated patients, 2527 had leukocytosis, 112 leukopenia and 8174 normal WBC. Increasing WBC (by 1 × 109/l) predicted poor outcome (ORadjusted 1.04[1.02–1.06]) but not mortality and sICH. Leukocytosis was independently associated with poor outcome (ORadjusted 1.48[1.29–1.69]) and mortality (ORadjusted 1.60[1.35–1.89]) but not with sICH (ORadjusted 1.17[0.94–1.45]). Leukopenia did not predict any outcome. In a subgroup, combined leukocytosis and elevated CRP had the strongest association with poor outcome (ORadjusted 2.26[1.76–2.91]) and mortality (ORadjusted 2.43[1.86–3.16]) when compared to combined normal WBC and CRP. Conclusion: In IVT-treated patients, leukocytosis independently predicted poor functional outcome and death. Bleeding complications after IVT were not independently associated with leukocytosis. © 2022, The Author(s).