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Published in: Neurological Sciences 8/2019

Open Access 01-08-2019 | Stroke | Original Article

New evidence-based A1, A2, A3 alarm time zones for transferring thrombolysed patients to hyper-acute stroke units: faster is better

Authors: Thang S. Han, Giosue Gulli, Brendan Affley, David Fluck, Christopher H. Fry, Christopher Barrett, Puneet Kakar, Sapna Sharma, Pankaj Sharma

Published in: Neurological Sciences | Issue 8/2019

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Abstract

Objectives

The National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence and The Royal College of Physicians recommend transferring thrombolysed patients with stroke to a hyperacute stroke unit (HASU) within 4 h from hospital arrival (TArrival-HASU), but there is paucity of evidence to support this cut-off. We assessed if a shorter interval within this target threshold conferred a significant improvement in patient mortality.

Design

We conducted a retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data from the Sentinel Stroke National Audit Programme.

Setting

Four major UK hyperacute stroke centres between 2014 and 2016.

Participants

A total of 183 men (median age = 75 years, IQR = 66–83) and 169 women (median age = 81 years, IQR = 72.5–88) admitted with acute ischaemic stroke.

Main outcome measures

We evaluated TArrival-HASU in relation to inpatient mortality, adjusted for age, sex, co-morbidities, stroke severity, time between procedures, time and day on arrival.

Results

There were 51 (14.5%) inpatient deaths. On ROC analysis, the AUC (area under the curve) was 61.1% (52.9–69.4%, p = 0.01) and the cut-off of TArrival-HASU where sensitivity equalled specificity was 2 h/15 min (intermediate range = 30 min to 3 h/15 min) for predicting mortality. On logistic regression, compared with the fastest TArrival-HASU group within 2 h/15 min, the slowest TArrival-HASU group beyond upper limit of intermediate range (≥ 3 h/15 min) had an increased risk of mortality: 5.6% vs. 19.6%, adjusted OR = 5.6 (95%CI:1.5–20.6, p = 0.010).

Conclusions

We propose three new alarm time zones (A1, A2 and A3) to improve stroke survival: “A1 Zone” (TArrival-HASU < 2 h/15 min) indicates that a desirable target, “A2 Zone” (TArrival-HASU = 2 h/15 min to 3 h/15 min), indicates increasing risk and should not delay any further, and “A3 Zone” (TArrival-HASU ≥ 3 h/15 min) indicates high risk and should be avoided.
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Metadata
Title
New evidence-based A1, A2, A3 alarm time zones for transferring thrombolysed patients to hyper-acute stroke units: faster is better
Authors
Thang S. Han
Giosue Gulli
Brendan Affley
David Fluck
Christopher H. Fry
Christopher Barrett
Puneet Kakar
Sapna Sharma
Pankaj Sharma
Publication date
01-08-2019
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Neurological Sciences / Issue 8/2019
Print ISSN: 1590-1874
Electronic ISSN: 1590-3478
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10072-019-03901-8

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