| Literature DB >> 28959497 |
Cora H Ormseth1, Kevin N Sheth1, Jeffrey L Saver2, Gregg C Fonarow3, Lee H Schwamm4.
Abstract
The American Heart Association's Get With the Guidelines (GWTG)-Stroke programme has changed stroke care delivery in the USA since its establishment in 2003. GWTG is a voluntary registry and continuous quality improvement initiative that collects data on patient characteristics, hospital adherence to guidelines and inpatient outcomes. Implementation of the programme saw increased provision of evidence-based care and improved patient outcomes. This review will describe the development of the programme and discuss the impact on stroke outcomes and transformation of stroke care delivery that followed its implementation.Entities:
Keywords: Stroke
Year: 2017 PMID: 28959497 PMCID: PMC5600018 DOI: 10.1136/svn-2017-000092
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stroke Vasc Neurol ISSN: 2059-8696
Figure 1GWTG quality improvement framework. Foundation of the GWTG quality improvement programme. Adapted from Current Treatment Options in Cardiovascular Medicine. 2005;7:253–258. GWTG, Get With the Guidelines; WS, workshop.
GWTG-Stroke achievement measures
| IV tPA arrive by 2 hours, treat by 3 hours | IV tPA in patients who arrive <2 hours after symptom onset and treated within 3 hours of symptom onset |
| Early antithrombotics | Antithrombotic medication prescribed within 48 hours of admission |
| Deep venous thrombosis (DVT) prophylaxis | DVT prophylaxis within 48 hours of admission in patients at risk for DVT |
| Discharge antithrombotics | Antithrombotic medication prescribed at discharge |
| Anticoagulation for atrial fibrillation | Anticoagulation prescribed at discharge in patients with documented atrial fibrillation |
| Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) 100 | Lipid-lowering medication prescribed at discharge if LDL ≥100 mg/dL, if patient treated with lipid-lowering agent before admission or LDL not documented |
| Smoking cessation | Smoking cessation intervention at discharge for current or recent smokers |
GWTG, Get With the Guidelines; IV tPA, intravenous tissue plasminogen activator.
Figure 2Enrolment in GWTG-Stroke from 2003 to 2016. Yearly and cumulative enrolment in GWTG-Stroke from 2003 to 2016. Used with permission from the American Heart Association. GWTG, Get With the Guidelines.
Topics and findings of selected major publications
| Schwamm 2005 | Recommendations from the ASA Task Force to establish stroke systems to improve patient outcomes in the prevention, treatment and rehabilitation of stroke in the USA. |
| Reeves 2005 | Results from four PCNASR pilot prototypes showed a minority of acute stroke patients are treated according to established guidelines. |
| Schwamm 2006 | Requirements for the design and implementation of a sustainable national registry for stroke quality improvement. |
| Schwamm 2009 | Implementation of GWTG is associated with increased adherence to all stroke performance measures regardlesss of hospital size, geography and teaching status. |
| Schwamm 2010 | A presidential advisory from the AHA/ASA reviewing a decade of efforts to reduce death and disability due to stroke. |
| Schwamm 2010 | Quality of care improved for black, white and Hispanic patients in GWTG hospitals, though black patients still received fewer evidence-based care processes. |
| Fonarow 2010 | Analysis of the first 1 million stroke and TIA admissions in GWTG showed improvements in quality of care, length of stay and inhospital mortality over time. |
| Smith 2010 | Development of a risk score for inhospital ischaemic stroke mortality derived and validated within the GWTG programme. |
| Fonarow 2011 | Fewer than one-third of patients treated with IV tPA had DTN times ≤60 min. Provided some of the first evidence that shorter DTN times were associated with improved outcomes and greater safety, calling for a targeted initiative to improve timeliness of reperfusion. |
| Lewis 2011 | Use of anticoagulation among stroke patients with atrial fibrillation increased to very high levels in GWTG hospitals. |
| Reeves 2011 | Improvements in quality care associated with the GWTG programme were related to better care rather than better data documentation. |
| Reeves 2012 | Comparison of patient and hospital characteristics among Medicare beneficiaries hospitalised with ischaemic stroke showed GWTG stroke admissions are representative of the national Medicare stroke population. |
| Messé 2012 | Use of tPA between 3 and 4.5 hours increased after publication of the ECASS III in GWTG hospitals. |
| Fonarow 2012 | Adding stroke severity as measured by the NIHSS improved model discrimination for hospital 30-day mortality. |
| Saver 2013 | Earlier thrombolytic treatment was associated with reduced mortality and symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage and higher rates of independent ambulation at discharge and discharge to home. |
| Schwamm 2013 | GWTG hospitals saw nearly doubled tPA administration from 2003 to 2011 with expansion to include more patients with mild symptoms, non-white race/ethnicity and older age. |
| Ellrodt 2013 | GWTG improves the value of care through rapid and sustained improvements in quality, narrowing the treatment gaps for women, younger and older patients and ethnic/racial minorities. |
| Fonarow 2014 | DTN times for tPA administration and clinical outcomes after stroke improved significantly after implementation of the Target: Stroke quality improvement initiative. |
| Cronin 2014 | Patients meeting ECASS III exclusion criteria are often treated in the 3–4.5 hour window without worse outcomes. |
| Xian 2015 | Warfarin treatment was associated with improved clinical outcomes among stroke patients with atrial fibrillation. |
| Reeves 2015 | Documentation of NIHSS has improved in GWTG hospitals but is higher for patients who are thrombolysis candidates. |
| Song 2016 | Medicare beneficiaries in GWTG hospitals had improved functional outcomes at discharge and reduced postdischarge mortality compared with their matched counterparts in unaffiliated hospitals. |
AHA/ASA, American Heart Association/American Stroke Association; DTN, door-to-needle; GWTG, Get With the Guidelines; IV TPA, intravenous tissue plasminogen activator; NIHSS, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale; PCNASR, Paul Coverdell National Acute Stroke Registry.
Figure 3Impact of the Target: Stroke quality improvement initiative. Time trend in the proportion of patients with door-to-needle times for tPA ≤60 min during the preintervention and postintervention periods of Target: Stroke. Reproduced with permission from JAMA. 2014; 311(16):1632–1640. Copyright ©2014 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. tPA, tissue plasminogen activator.