Abstract
Background/Objectives: Acute ischemic stroke (AIS) associated with cervical carotid artery pathology remains a therapeutic challenge due to uncertainty regarding emergent carotid artery stenting (eCAS) and the need for intensified antithrombotic therapy, which may increase the risk of hemorrhagic transformation (HT). This retrospective cohort study evaluated the functional and safety outcomes of eCAS within an extended treatment time window. Methods: We analyzed 139 consecutive patients with anterior circulation AIS and large vessel occlusion treated with mechanical thrombectomy between 2019 and 2024. Patients were eligible for MT within 24 h based on clinical-core mismatch (DAWN) or perfusion-core mismatch (DEFUSE 3) criteria. Outcomes were compared between patients treated with eCAS and those undergoing MT without stenting. Results: Twenty-five patients underwent eCAS, predominantly for tandem lesions (80%). Median age was 66 years, median baseline NIHSS was 14, and median infarct core volume on DWI/CTP was 15 mL. Baseline characteristics were comparable between groups, except for the site of occlusion (p < 0.001). A good functional outcome (modified Rankin Scale, mRS 0-2 at 90 days) was observed in 60% of patients in the eCAS group versus 43% in the non-stenting group, without statistical significance (p = 0.067). Rates of parenchymal hematoma (12% vs. 18.4%) and symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage (8% vs. 3.5%) were similar between groups. Conclusions: In this single-center cohort, eCAS performed in an extended time window did not demonstrate a clear signal of increased hemorrhagic risk. However, residual confounding and imbalance between treatment groups persisted despite the application of inverse probability weighting (IPW), and the findings should be interpreted cautiously.