| Literature DB >> 32336270 |
Hannah A Lumley1, Darren Flynn2, Lisa Shaw3, Graham McClelland3,4, Gary A Ford5, Phil M White3,6, Christopher I Price3,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pre-hospital identification of key subgroups within the suspected stroke population could reduce delays to emergency treatment. We aimed to identify and describe technology with existing proof of concept for diagnosis or stratification of patients in the pre-hospital setting.Entities:
Keywords: Ambulance; Biomarkers; Diagnosis; Imaging; Paramedic; Pre-hospital; Stratification; Stroke; Technology; Telemedicine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32336270 PMCID: PMC7183583 DOI: 10.1186/s12873-020-00323-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Emerg Med ISSN: 1471-227X
Fig. 1Flow diagram summarising the process used to identify studies
Characteristics of included studies
| Category | Product / Project Name | Author/Year | Title | Country | Article type | Enrolled patients | Age (median) & Gender | Time window | Development stage | Study Design |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biomarkers | Helsinki Ultra-acute Stroke Biomarker Study | Lindsberg 2018 [ | Helsinki Ultra-acute Stroke Biomarker Study | Finland | Protocol | N/A | N/A | Ultra-acute | Alpha | Protocol:Single-centre Prospective diagnostic accuracy |
| Biomarkers | SMARTChip / PRISM | Shaw et al. 2019 [ | Purines for Rapid Identification of Stroke Mimics (PRISM) | UK | Protocol | N/A | N/A | NR | Alpha | Protocol: Multicentre Prospective diagnostic accuracy |
| Prehospital imaging | Handheld Infra-red Screening Device | Murphy et al. 2015 [ | Measurement of acute brain hemorrhage in the pre-hospital setting | USA | Results | 46 suspected stroke | NR | NR | NR | Single-centre Prospective diagnostic accuracy |
| Prehospital imaging | ELECTRA-STROKE | Coutinho 2019 [ | Electra-Stroke:EEG controlled triage in the ambulance for acute ischemic stroke | Netherlands | Protocol | N/A | N/A | Acute | Beta | Protocol: Multicentre Prospective diagnostic accuracy |
| Telestroke | TeleBAT | LaMonte et al. 2000 [ | TeleBAT: Mobile telemedicine for the brain attack team | USA | Results | 6 suspected stroke | NR | NR | Beta | Single-centre Development and pilot test |
| Xiao et al. 2000 [ | Design and evaluation of a real-time mobile telemedicine system for ambulance transport | USA | Results | NR | NR | |||||
| Telestroke | Med-on-@ix /‘peeq-box’ | Bergrath et al. 2012 [ | Feasibility of pre-hospital teleconsultation in acute stroke: a pilot study in clinical routine | Germany | Results | 64 suspected stroke | 80 years 64% female | Acute | Beta | Multicentre Prospective non-randomised trial |
| Telestroke | Stroke Angel | Ziegler et al. 2008 [ | Mobile computing systems in preclinical care of stroke: Results of the stroke angel initiative within the BMBF project PerCoMed | Germany | Results | 443 suspected stroke | NR | Acute | Beta | Multicentre Prospective cohort |
| Rashid et al. 2015 [ | Stroke angel: Telemedicine prenotification improves door-to-CT and rate of systemic thrombolysis | Germany | Results | 1262 suspected stroke | NR | Ultra-acute | Gamma | Single-centre Prospective cohort | ||
| Telestroke | PreSSUB I | Espinoza et al. 2016 [ | Development and Pilot Testing of 24/7 In-Ambulance Telemedicine for Acute Stroke | Belgium | Results | 16 suspected stroke | NR | Acute | Beta | Single-centre Development and pilot test |
| Telestroke | PreSSUB II | Espinoza et al. 2015 [ | PreSSUB II: The prehospital stroke study at the Universitair Ziekenhuis Brussel II | Belgium | Protocol | N/A | N/A | Acute | Beta | Protocol: Single-centre RCT |
| Brouns et al. 2016 [ | 24/7 In-Ambulance telestroke: Results from the pre-hospital stroke study at the universitair ziekenhuis brussel II (PreSSUB II) | Belgium | Results | 1 suspected stroke | NR | Acute | Gamma | Single-centre RCT | ||
| Telestroke | InTouch Xpress | Belt et al. 2016 [ | In-transit telemedicine speeds ischemic stroke treatment: preliminary results | USA | Results | 163 suspected stroke | NR | Ultra-acute | Gamma | Multicentre Feasibility and pilot test |
| Telestroke | Smartphone with encrypted software | Brotons et al. 2016 [ | The use of prehospital telemedicine to aid in the decision to airlift patients to a comprehensive stroke center from a rural area. | USA | Results | 45 suspected stroke | NR | NR | Beta | Single-centre Feasibility and pilot test |
| Telestroke | HipaaBridge with iPads | Barrett et al. 2017 [ | Ambulance-based assessment of NIH Stroke Scale with telemedicine: A feasibility pilot study | USA | Results | 11 suspected stroke | 65 years 81% female | NR | Beta | Single-centre Feasibility and pilot test |
| Telestroke | iPad with video capability | Shah et al. 2017 [ | A novel use of out-of-hospital telemedicine to decrease door-to-computed tomography results in acute strokes | USA | Results | NR | NR | NR | Beta | Single-centre Prospective cohort |
| Telestroke | Field-Telestroke | Andrefsky et al. 2018 [ | Impact of EMS field-telestroke with hand-held iPads on IV-TPA therapy for stroke | USA | Results | NR | NR | Ultra-acute | Beta | Single-centre Retrospective before and after |
| Telestroke | REACHOUT | Hackett et al. 2018 [ | EMS based telestroke suggests reduced door to needle time compared to hospital based telestroke | USA | Results | 200 suspected stroke | NR | Ultra-acute | Beta | Multicentre Prospective cohort |
| Telestroke | Custom-built system | Johansson 2019 [ | Technical feasibility and ambulance nurses’ view of a digital telemedicine system in pre-hospital stroke care: a pilot study | Sweden | Results | 11 suspected stroke | NR | NR | Beta | Single-centre Mixed methods pilot test |
Descriptions of Biomarker Technologies and Outcomes
| Study Details | Portability | Expertise and training requirements | Person interpreting output | Location (on scene; stationary ambulance; in transit) | Purpose, diagnostic accuracy, comparator and use of clinical scale | Physical invasiveness and time to acquire results | Acceptability: clinicians and/or patients | Impact on EMS clinician decisions or treatment provision | Impact on process (time metrics) or patient outcomes | Costs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lindsberg 2018 [ Sub-type: Proteins | Portable with use of a vehicle | EMS clinician | EMS clinician | In transit | -Mimic -TIA -Ischaemia -Haemorrhage Results not yet available Definitive diagnosis | Invasive | Not assessed | Results not yet available Results not yet available | Not yet available will be evaluated using 3-month modified Rankin Scale (mRS) | Not reported |
Shaw et al. 2019 [ Sub-type: Purines (Metabolite) | Highly portable (hand-held) | EMS clinician Required | EMS clinician | On scene Stationary In transit | -Mimic -TIA -Ischaemia -Haemorrhage Results not yet available Expert clinical opinion informed by brain imaging and/or other investigations | Invasive | Results not yet available | Results not yet available Results not yet available | Not yet available | Not reported |
Descriptions of Pre-hospital Imaging Technologies and Outcomes
| Study Details | Portability and Resolution | Expertise and training requirements | Person interpreting output | Location (on scene; stationary ambulance; in transit) | Purpose, Diagnostic accuracy, comparator and clinical scale | Physical | Acceptability: clinicians and/or patients | Impact on EMS clinician decisions or treatment provision | Impact on process (time metrics) or patient outcomes | Costs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Murphy et al. 2015 [ Electromagnetic Spectroscopy – Light FDA approved CE Marked ISO certificatio | Highly portable (hand-held) Low resolution | Qualified Paramedic required | EMS clinician | In transit | -Stroke -Mimic -Haemorrhage False Positive Rate: 15 False Negative Rate: 2 True Positive Rate: 5 True Negative Rate: 10 False Positive Rate: 8 False Negative Rate: 2 True Positive Rate: 5 True Negative Rate: 6 | Non-invasive 2–3 min | 2–3 min too long (+increased FPR if time reduced). Measurements performed during fast ambulance transport appeared to cause false positive readings Unreliable measurement for combative and epileptic patients. | None Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
Coutinho 2019 [ EEG Waveguard™ dry electrode cap and the eego™ amplifier are both CE marked | Portable with use of a vehicle Low Resolution | Qualified paramedic Not reported | Unclear | In transit Other locations unclear | -LVO-a Results not yet available | Non-invasive ‘Under 5 min’ | Results not yet available | Results not yet available | Results not yet available | Not reported |
Descriptions of Telestroke Technologies
| Study Details | Communication Method | Portability, Resolution and Data Transfer Speed | Expertise and training Requirements | Person interpreting output | Location (on scene; stationary ambulance; in transit) | Costs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
LaMonte et al. 2000 [ Xiao et al. 2000 [ | Unidirectional video and data transfer | Portable with use of a vehicle | Remote physician | Stationary In transit | $20,000–$25,000 (~£14,000 - £17,000) in year 2000 + ‘operating cost of 4 cell phones’ | |
Bergrath et al. 2012 [ | Bidirectional video and data transfer | Portable with use of a vehicle | Remote physician | Stationary In transit | Not reported | |
Ziegler et al. 2008 [ Rashid et al. 2015 [ | Clinical data transfer No audio or video | Highly portable (hand-held) | EMS clinician | Stationary In transit | Not reported | |
Espinoza et al. 2016 [ | Bidirectional video and data transfer | Portable with use of a vehicle | Remote physician | In transit | Not reported | |
Espinoza et al. 2015 [ Brouns et al. 2016 [ | Bidirectional video and data transfer | Portable with use of a vehicle | Remote physician | In transit | Not reported | |
Belt et al. 2016 [ | Bidirectional video | Highly portable (hand-held) | Remote physician | In transit | ~$33,000 (~£27,000) in 2016: $23,000 (~£19,000) equipment + ~ $10,000 (~£8000) maintenance | |
Brotons et al. 2016 [ | Bidirectional video (unclear if data transfer) | Highly portable (hand-held) | Remote physician | On scene Stationary | $2250 (~£1800) per unit in 2016 | |
Barrett et al. 2017 [ | Bidirectional video | Highly portable (hand-held) | Remote physician | In transit | ~$600 (~£500) in 2017 | |
Shah et al. 2017 [ | Bidirectional video | Highly portable (hand-held) | Remote physician | Not reported | Not reported | |
Andrefsky et al. 2018 [ | Bidirectional video | Highly portable (hand-held) | Remote physician | On scene In transit | Described as ‘Low cost’ | |
Hackett et al. 2018 [ | Bidirectional video | Highly portable (hand-held) | Remote physician | Not reported | Not reported | |
| Bidirectional video | Portable with use of a vehicle | Remote physician | Not reported | Not reported |
Telestroke Technology Study Outcomes
| Study details | Purpose, Diagnostic accuracy, comparator and clinical scale | Time to conduct telestroke assessment | Acceptability: clinicians and/or patients | Impact on EMS clinician decisions or treatment | Impact on process (time metrics) outcomes | Impact on patient outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
LaMonte et al. 2000 [ Xiao et al. 1997 [ | Not reported | Clinicians in favour of TeleBAT (privacy of video transmission, non-interference with regular tasks on ambulances; providing valuable information; & usability) System did not intrude into paramedic/patient privacy and was safe. Adequate for clinical examinations: stroke specialists could score most NIHSS items, but difficulty with patients’ leg movement). Easy to learn/operate. | Not reported Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | |
Bergrath et al. 2012 [ | Telestroke: False Positive Rate: 7; True Positive Rate: 11 vs standard EMS transport False Positive Rate: 15; True Positive Rate: 30 Non-significant differences between telestroke and standard EMS for other neurological/non-neurological diagnoses | Not reported | In 15 of 18 missions the telemedicine system functioned faultlessly. Significantly more (median 14) stroke-specific data points were transferred, in written form, from the EMS to the hospital via telestroke (versus median of 5 non-telestroke group). | Not reported No significant impact on thrombolysis rates: 3/10 (30%) telestroke 5/27 (19%) standard EMS | 4 min median increase with Telestroke (median 25 mins) vs standard EMS (median 21 mins). Difference was non-significant 2.5 min median increase with Telestroke (median 37.5 mins) vs standard EMS (median 35 mins). Difference was non-significant 2 min increase with Telestroke (median 59.5 mins) vs standard EMS (median 57.5 mins. Difference was non- significant | Not reported |
Ziegler et al. 2008 [ | Stroke vs non-stroke False Positive Rate: 27 False Negative Rate: 53 True Positive Rate: 102 True Negative Rate: 44 Sensitivity = 65.81% Specificity = 61.97% | Not reported | Benefits stated by hospital clinicians were that EMS clinicians are “trained” by direct feedback from the PDA in dealing with the stroke patient. The use of Stroke Angel was evaluated to be consistently positive by EMS clinicians. Hospital clinicians took the early warning seriously and were better prepared for the arrival of patients. Better communication between doctors and EMS clinicians, and improved perception of each other’s tasks and work. | Not reported Local lysis rate (number of lyses / all stroke patients enrolled on the stroke unit) increased from 6.1% (2005) to 11.2% (2007) | (53 mins); after (2007) 55 mins | 1.5% of cases with symptomatic intracerebral bleeding (SITS-MOST criteria) |
Rashid et al. 2015 [ | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported Telestroke (39%), standard EMS (32%). 7% difference statistically significant | Not reported | ||
Espinoza et al. 2016 [ Certified by Autographe (Wavre, Belgium) | Median 9 min (IQR 8–13 min) | NIHSS was considered unsuitable for mobile telemedicine – this led to the development of a novel scale to rapidly assess stroke severity via telemedicine without assistance by a third party – the Unassisted Telestroke Scale. 94% of teleconsultations were established successfully; one major technical issue occurred due to battery malfunction of the in-ambulance device. | Not reported Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | |
Espinoza et al. 2015 [ Brouns et al. 2016 [ Certified by Autographe | Not reported | The proportion of successful in-ambulance telemedicine assessments was 96.2% [ Technical and organisational feasibility was established [ | Not reported Thrombolysis rate (not yet available) | Standard EMS (87.1 min; 95% CI = 68.7–105.6) versus telestroke (50.8 min; 95% CI = 46.3–55.3): Statistically significant mean reduction of 36.4 min (95% CI = 17.5 to 55.3) | No telestroke-related adverse events. Mortality was similar in both groups [ mRS, Barthel Index, EQ-5D and WHO-Five Well-being Index (not yet available) | |
Belt et al. 2016 [ | -Stroke -Ischemia Stroke vs non-stroke (telestroke) False Positives: 3 True Positives: 12 Stroke vs non-stroke (Standard EMS transport) False Positives: 17 True Positives: 54 | With alteplase ( Without alteplase ( | Clinicians: 39% of teleconsults required reconnection. Connectivity was rapidly re-established in all but two cases; in all but these two cases, the tele-neurologist felt the clinical evaluation was satisfactory. Acceptance among patients and EMS has been uniformly positive (but no data are presented to support this statement). | Not assessed Not reported | Telestroke - mean 28 mins Standard EMS – mean 41 mins (decrease of 13 min was statistically significant) Telestroke - mean 31.1 mins Standard EMS – mean 50 mins (18.9 min decrease was non-significant) Telestroke - mean 29 mins Standard EMS – mean 34 mins (5 min decrease was non-significant) Telestroke - mean 92 mins Standard EMS – mean 122 mins (32 min decrease was significant) | Deaths: 0 (in both groups) Complications: 1 in telestroke group (vs 5 in standard EMS group) |
Brotons et al. 2016 [ | Not reported | Paramedics and physicians: easy to use and extremely valuable in making triage decision. | Direct transfer to CSC Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | |
Barrett et al. 2017 [ | Mean NIHSS assessment time 7.6 mins (range 3 to 9.8 mins) | Neurologists rated 83% of encounters as ‘satisfied/very satisfied’. EMS clinicians - 90% of encounters ‘satisfied/very satisfied’. | None Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | |
Shah et al. 2017 [ | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported Not reported | Mean decrease 12 mins (95% CI = 9.4–14.6) | Not reported | |
Andrefsky et al. 2018 [ | Not reported | Not reported | None Non-significant increase in thrombolysis (10.6–12.7%) | Telestroke (10.7 mins) Standard EMS (34.5 mins) (improvement 23.8 mins) Telestroke (41 mins) Standard EMS (50 mins) (improvement 9 mins) | Not reported | |
Hackett et al. 2018 [ | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported Not reported | Significant median reduction of 26 min with EMS telestroke (median 39.5 mins) compared with hospital based telestroke (median 65.5 mins) | Not reported | |
Johansson et al. 2019 [ CE Marked | Not reported | 4 EMS nurses & 1 remote physician: 2 EMS nurses stated the system was reliable; 3 considered it to be safe. Minor operating interference, physicians’ competence crucial and unclear efficacy emerged from analysis of free text. Remote physician - image quality ‘more than satisfactory’. | Not assessed Not assessed | 3 out 4 of EMS nurses did not believe that the system yielded a more uniform assessment or would reduce time-to-treatment | Not reported |