# Sex-based differences in outcomes following endovascular therapy for anterior circulation large vessel occlusion: a pooled analysis of DEVT, RESCUE BT, and MARVEL trials

**Authors:** Yangyang Duan, Jinfu Ma, Xu Xu, Haoxuan Zhu, Xiaolei Shi, Shihai Yang, Zhixi Wang, Mingyang Chen, Yihui Yang, Yuhan Fan, Binghan Wang, Guojian Liu, Linyu Li, Zhenxuan Tian, Boyu Chen, Chawen Ding, Dahong Yang, Wenzhe Sun, Gaoming Li, Lilan Wang, Shitao Fan, Chengsong Yue, Nizhen Yu, Jie Yang, Wei Li, Zhuang Li, Lingyu Zhang

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2025.1753257 · Frontiers in Neurology · 2026-01-12

## TL;DR

This study found no significant differences in outcomes between men and women who received endovascular therapy for large vessel occlusion in the brain.

## Contribution

A pooled analysis across three trials to assess sex-based differences in endovascular therapy outcomes for stroke.

## Key findings

- No sex differences in 90-day clinical outcomes following endovascular therapy.
- Consistent results for secondary outcomes like functional independence and safety outcomes.
- No evidence of sex modifying treatment effects in subgroups.

## Abstract

This study sought to characterize sex-specific treatment effects by comparing clinical outcomes between men and women undergoing EVT.

Analyses were based on the DEVT, RESCUE BT, and MARVEL databases. Men and women were matched using propensity score matching (PSM). The primary outcome was defined as the 90-day ordinal modified Rankin Scale score (mRS) distribution. Secondary outcomes included the favorite outcome (mRS 0 to 3), functional independence (mRS 0 to 2), and excellent outcome (mRS 0 to 1). Safety outcomes were symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (sICH) and mortality.

Of 2,862 patients, 1,221 (42.7%) were women and 1,641 (57.3%) were men. After adjusting for covariates, there were no sex differences in 90-day ordinal mRS distribution (median [interquartile range], 3 [1–6] versus 3 [1–5], common odds ratio [OR], 1.02 [0.89–1.18], p = 0.741). The secondary outcomes demonstrated consistency with the primary findings, and the safety outcomes remained stable across men and women. After 1:1 PSM, the results remained consistent with the adjusted outcomes described above.

This pooled analysis demonstrated that no statistically significant differences were observed between men and women in clinical or safety outcomes following EVT for anterior circulation LVO. Furthermore, there was no evidence of interaction between sex and predefined subgroups in terms of treatment effect modification for EVT outcomes.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** stroke (MONDO:0005098)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** large vessel occlusion (MESH:C536223), intracranial hemorrhage (MESH:D020300)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

40 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12832441/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12832441