Literature DB >> 32078483

Melbourne Mobile Stroke Unit and Reperfusion Therapy: Greater Clinical Impact of Thrombectomy Than Thrombolysis.

Henry Zhao1,2,3, Skye Coote1,2, Damien Easton1,2, Francesca Langenberg4, Michael Stephenson3, Karen Smith3,5,6,7, Stephen Bernard3,7, Dominique A Cadilhac8,9, Joosup Kim8,9, Christopher F Bladin8,10, Leonid Churilov1,11, Douglas E Crompton12, Helen M Dewey10, Lauren M Sanders13, Tissa Wijeratne14, Geoffrey Cloud15,16, Duncan M Brooks17, Hamed Asadi17, Vincent Thijs8,18, Ronil V Chandra19, Henry Ma20, Patricia M Desmond4,2, Richard J Dowling4,2, Peter J Mitchell4,2, Nawaf Yassi1,2,8,3, Bernard Yan1,4,2, Bruce C V Campbell1,2,3, Mark W Parsons1,2, Geoffrey A Donnan1,2,8, Stephen M Davis1,2.   

Abstract

Background and Purpose- Mobile stroke units (MSUs) are increasingly used worldwide to provide prehospital triage and treatment. The benefits of MSUs in giving earlier thrombolysis have been well established, but the impacts of MSUs on endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) and effect on disability avoidance are largely unknown. We aimed to determine the clinical impact and disability reduction for reperfusion therapies in the first operational year of the Melbourne MSU. Methods- Treatment time metrics for MSU patients receiving reperfusion therapy were compared with control patients presenting to metropolitan Melbourne stroke units via standard ambulance within MSU operating hours. The primary outcome was median time difference in first ambulance dispatch to treatment modeled using quantile regression analysis. Time savings were subsequently converted to disability-adjusted life years avoided using published estimates. Results- In the first 365-day operation of the Melbourne MSU, prehospital thrombolysis was administered to 100 patients (mean age, 73.8 years; 62% men). The median time savings per MSU patient, compared with the control cohort, was 26 minutes (P<0.001) for dispatch to hospital arrival and 15 minutes (P<0.001) for hospital arrival to thrombolysis. The calculated overall time saving from dispatch to thrombolysis was 42.5 minutes (95% CI, 36.0-49.0). In the same period, 41 MSU patients received EVT (mean age, 76 years; 61% men) with median dispatch-to-treatment time saving of 51 minutes ([95% CI, 30.1-71.9], P<0.001). This included a median time saving of 17 minutes ([95% CI, 7.6-26.4], P=0.001) for EVT hospital arrival to arterial puncture for MSU patients. Estimated median disability-adjusted life years saved through earlier provision of reperfusion therapies were 20.9 for thrombolysis and 24.6 for EVT. Conclusions- The Melbourne MSU substantially reduced time to reperfusion therapies, with the greatest estimated disability avoidance driven by the more powerful impact of earlier EVT. These findings highlight the benefits of prehospital notification and direct triage to EVT centers with facilitated workflow on arrival by the MSU.

Entities:  

Keywords:  aged; hospitals; humans; stroke; workflow

Year:  2020        PMID: 32078483     DOI: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.119.027843

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


  11 in total

1.  Association Between Dispatch of Mobile Stroke Units and Functional Outcomes Among Patients With Acute Ischemic Stroke in Berlin.

Authors:  Martin Ebinger; Bob Siegerink; Alexander Kunz; Matthias Wendt; Joachim E Weber; Eugen Schwabauer; Frederik Geisler; Erik Freitag; Julia Lange; Janina Behrens; Hebun Erdur; Ramanan Ganeshan; Thomas Liman; Jan F Scheitz; Ludwig Schlemm; Peter Harmel; Katja Zieschang; Irina Lorenz-Meyer; Ira Napierkowski; Carolin Waldschmidt; Christian H Nolte; Ulrike Grittner; Edzard Wiener; Georg Bohner; Darius G Nabavi; Ingo Schmehl; Axel Ekkernkamp; Gerhard J Jungehulsing; Bruno-Marcel Mackert; Andreas Hartmann; Jessica L Rohmann; Matthias Endres; Heinrich J Audebert
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2021-02-02       Impact factor: 56.272

Review 2.  Mobile Stroke Units: Current Evidence and Impact.

Authors:  Praveen Hariharan; Muhammad Bilal Tariq; James C Grotta; Alexandra L Czap
Journal:  Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep       Date:  2022-02-07       Impact factor: 5.081

3.  European Stroke Organisation (ESO) guidelines on mobile stroke units for prehospital stroke management.

Authors:  Silke Walter; Heinrich J Audebert; Aristeidis H Katsanos; Karianne Larsen; Simona Sacco; Thorsten Steiner; Guillaume Turc; Georgios Tsivgoulis
Journal:  Eur Stroke J       Date:  2022-02-09

4.  Real-world, feasibility study to investigate the use of a multidisciplinary app (Pulsara) to improve prehospital communication and timelines for acute stroke/STEMI care.

Authors:  Chris F Bladin; Kathleen L Bagot; Michelle Vu; Joosup Kim; Stephen Bernard; Karen Smith; Grant Hocking; Tessa Coupland; Debra Pearce; Diane Badcock; Marc Budge; Voltaire Nadurata; Wayne Pearce; Howard Hall; Ben Kelly; Angie Spencer; Pauline Chapman; Ernesto Oqueli; Ramesh Sahathevan; Thomas Kraemer; Casey Hair; Dion Stub; Dominique A Cadilhac
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2022-07-18       Impact factor: 3.006

5.  Mobile Stroke Unit Operational Metrics: Institutional Experience, Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Nathaniel R Ellens; Derrek Schartz; Redi Rahmani; Sajal Medha K Akkipeddi; Adam G Kelly; Curtis G Benesch; Stephanie A Parker; Jason L Burgett; Diana Proper; Webster H Pilcher; Thomas K Mattingly; James C Grotta; Tarun Bhalla; Matthew T Bender
Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2022-05-09       Impact factor: 4.086

6.  Machine Learning Automated Detection of Large Vessel Occlusion From Mobile Stroke Unit Computed Tomography Angiography.

Authors:  Luca Giancardo; Sunil A Sheth; Alexandra L Czap; Mersedeh Bahr-Hosseini; Noopur Singh; Jose-Miguel Yamal; May Nour; Stephanie Parker; Youngran Kim; Lucas Restrepo; Rania Abdelkhaleq; Sergio Salazar-Marioni; Kenny Phan; Ritvij Bowry; Suja S Rajan; James C Grotta; Jeffrey L Saver
Journal:  Stroke       Date:  2021-12-06       Impact factor: 10.170

7.  Pre-hospital triage of suspected acute stroke patients in a mobile stroke unit in the rural Alberta.

Authors:  Mahesh P Kate; Thomas Jeerakathil; Brian H Buck; Khurshid Khan; Ali Zohair Nomani; Asif Butt; Sibi Thirunavukkarasu; Tomasz Nowacki; Hayrapet Kalashyan; Mar Irida Lloret-Villas; Atlantic D'Souza; Sachin Mishra; Jennifer McCombe; Kenneth Butcher; Glen Jickling; Maher Saqqur; Ashfaq Shuaib
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-03-02       Impact factor: 4.379

8.  Tranexamic acid for intracerebral haemorrhage within 2 hours of onset: protocol of a phase II randomised placebo-controlled double-blind multicentre trial.

Authors:  Geoffrey A Donnan; Stephen M Davis; Nawaf Yassi; Henry Zhao; Leonid Churilov; Bruce C V Campbell; Teddy Wu; Henry Ma; Andrew Cheung; Timothy Kleinig; Helen Brown; Philip Choi; Jiann-Shing Jeng; Annemarei Ranta; Hao-Kuang Wang; Geoffrey C Cloud; Rohan Grimley; Darshan Shah; Neil Spratt; Der-Yang Cho; Karim Mahawish; Lauren Sanders; John Worthington; Ben Clissold; Atte Meretoja; Vignan Yogendrakumar; Mai Duy Ton; Duc Phuc Dang; Nguyen Thai My Phuong; Huy-Thang Nguyen; Chung Y Hsu; Gagan Sharma; Peter J Mitchell; Bernard Yan; Mark W Parsons; Christopher Levi
Journal:  Stroke Vasc Neurol       Date:  2021-11-30

9.  Emergency medical dispatchers' ability to identify large vessel occlusion stroke during emergency calls.

Authors:  Pauli E T Vuorinen; Jyrki P J Ollikainen; Pasi A Ketola; Riikka-Liisa K Vuorinen; Piritta A Setälä; Sanna E Hoppu
Journal:  Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med       Date:  2021-07-19       Impact factor: 2.953

Review 10.  Mobile stroke care expedites intravenous thrombolysis and endovascular thrombectomy.

Authors:  Matthew T Bender; Thomas K Mattingly; Redi Rahmani; Diana Proper; Walter A Burnett; Jason L Burgett; Joshua LEsperance; Jeremy T Cushman; Webster H Pilcher; Curtis G Benesch; Adam G Kelly; Tarun Bhalla
Journal:  Stroke Vasc Neurol       Date:  2021-12-24
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