Literature DB >> 31684847

Influence of Guidelines in Endovascular Therapy Decision Making in Acute Ischemic Stroke: Insights From UNMASK EVT.

Nima Kashani1, Johanna M Ospel1,2, Bijoy K Menon1,3, Gustavo Saposnik4, Mohammed Almekhlafi1,3, Pillai N Sylaja5, Bruce C V Campbell6, Ji-Hoe Heo7, Peter J Mitchell8, Mathew Cherian9, Francis Turjman10, Byungmoon Kim11, Urs Fischer12, Alexis T Wilson3, Blaise Baxter13, Alejandro Rabinstein14, Shinichi Yoshimura15, Michael D Hill1,3, Mayank Goyal1,3.   

Abstract

Background and Purpose- The American Heart Association and the American Stroke Association guidelines for early management of patients with ischemic stroke offer guidance to physicians involved in acute stroke care and clarify endovascular treatment indications. The purpose of this study was to assess concordance of physicians' endovascular treatment decision-making with current American Heart Association and the American Stroke Association stroke treatment guidelines using a survey-approach and to explore how decision-making in the absence of guideline recommendations is approached. Methods- In an international cross-sectional survey (UNMASK-EVT), physicians were randomly assigned 10 of 22 case scenarios (8 constructed with level 1A and 11 with level 2B evidence for endovascular treatment and 3 scenarios without guideline coverage) and asked to declare their treatment approach (1) under their current local resources and (2) assuming there were no external constraints. The proportion of physicians offering endovascular therapy (EVT) was calculated. Subgroup analysis was performed for different specialties, geographic regions, with regard to physicians' age, endovascular, and general stroke treatment experience. Results- When facing level 1A evidence, participants decided in favor of EVT in 86.8% under current local resources and in 90.6% under assumed ideal conditions, that is, 9.4% decided against EVT even under assumed ideal conditions. In case scenarios with level 2B evidence, 66.3% decided to proceed with EVT under current local resources and 69.7% under assumed ideal conditions. Conclusions- There is potential for improving thinking around the decision to offer endovascular treatment, since physicians did not offer EVT even under assumed ideal conditions in 9.4% despite facing level 1A evidence. A majority of physicians would offer EVT even for level 2B evidence cases.

Entities:  

Keywords:  cross-sectional studies; decision-making; physicians; stroke; treatment

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31684847     DOI: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.119.026982

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stroke        ISSN: 0039-2499            Impact factor:   7.914


  1 in total

1.  Worldwide anaesthesia use during endovascular treatment for medium vessel occlusion stroke.

Authors:  Manon Kappelhof; Johanna M Ospel; Petra Cimflova; Nima Kashani; Nishita Singh; Rosalie McDonough; Arshia Sehgal; Mohammed A Almekhlafi; Jens Fiehler; Michael Chen; Nobuyuki Sakai; Charles Blm Majoie; Mayank Goyal
Journal:  Interv Neuroradiol       Date:  2021-10-19       Impact factor: 1.764

  1 in total

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