Authors
Anderson Brito, Leonardo Cruz-Criollo, Milagros Galecio-Castillo, Vanessa Cano-Nigenda, Piyush Kalakoti, Aaron Rodriguez-Calienes, Nashwa Abdelhakim, Jorge Cespedes, Andres Mercado, Nicholas M Mohr, Amir Shaban, Jenny Huynh, Adrian Pereda-Castillo, Fabiola Eunice Serrano Arias, Brian J Smith, James C Torner, Miguel A Barboza, Antonio Arauz, Santiago Ortega-Gutierrez
Published in
Neurology. Volume 107. Issue 2. Pages e218259. Jul 28, 2026. Epub Jun 25, 2026.
Abstract
Cerebral edema is a common yet poorly defined neuroimaging feature in cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT), and its influence on downstream clinical outcomes has not been fully elucidated. We aimed to characterize cerebral edema subtypes and evaluate their effect on functional outcomes in patients with CVT.
We conducted a retrospective analysis using the CLOT-VENUS (Collaboration on Cerebral Venous Thrombosis) registry, an international cohort of patients with acute CVT treated at 2 major stroke centers in the United States and Mexico between 2004 and 2024. Admission neuroimaging (MRI and/or CT) was independently reviewed to classify cerebral edema into 3 subtypes: global cerebral edema, cytotoxic edema, and vasogenic edema. The primary outcome was the 6-month modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score, which was assessed as an ordinal shift. Secondary outcomes included ordinal mRS score at discharge, poor functional outcome (mRS 3-6 vs 0-2 and mRS 2-6 vs 0-1), in-hospital mortality, 6-month mortality, and length of hospital stay (LOS). Multivariable models adjusted for prespecified baseline confounders were used to estimate the effect of cerebral edema on these outcomes.
We included 394 patients with CVT (mean age was 42.7 ± 16.9 years; 65.5% female). Cerebral edema was identified in 220 patients and classified as cytotoxic edema (32.5%), global cerebral edema (25.6%), or vasogenic edema (24.9%). At discharge, global cerebral edema (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: 2.79; 95% CI 1.83-4.27; p < 0.001) and cytotoxic edema (aOR: 1.89; 95% CI 1.27-2.80; p = 0.002) increased the odds of worse mRS scores. Similarly, at 6-month follow-up, both global cerebral edema (aOR: 1.83; CI 1.19-2.81; p = 0.006) and cytotoxic edema (aOR: 1.92; CI 1.28-2.88; p = 0.002) had a direct effect on higher odds of mRS scores. In addition, cytotoxic edema increased the risk of in-hospital mortality (aOR: 3.17; 95% CI 1.22-8.96; p = 0.021). Global cerebral edema led to a prolonged LOS (+2.00 days at median; p = 0.014).
Our results suggest that cytotoxic and global cerebral edema independently worsened 6-month functional outcomes in patients with CVT, with cytotoxic edema also increasing the risk of in-hospital mortality. Prospective studies should evaluate whether early cerebral edema subtypes can serve as critical entities that could potentially stratify patients for adjunctive therapies beyond anticoagulation.
PMID:
42348805
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 26 Jun 2026.
Read full publication at:
Please sign in
to see all details.
Advertisement
Stats
- Recommendations n/a n/a positive of 0 vote(s)
- Views 15
- Comments 0