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Analysis of Workflow and Time to Treatment on Thrombectomy Outcome in the Endovascular Treatment for Small Core and Proximal Occlusion Ischemic Stroke (ESCAPE) Randomized, Controlled Trial

Authors :
Frank L. Silver
Noreen Kamal
Andrew M. Demchuk
Donald Frei
Mark Lowerison
Michael D. Hill
Ashfaq Shuaib
Donatella Tampieri
Yukun Zhang
Muneer Eesa
Biggya L. Sapkota
Tolulope T. Sajobi
Blaise Baxter
Dar Dowlatshahi
Jeanne Teitelbaum
David Williams
Tudor G Jovin
Mayank Goyal
Christopher Fanale
John Thornton
Timo Krings
Jeremy L. Rempel
Daniel Roy
Bijoy K Menon
Cheemun Lum
Alexandre Y Poppe
Source :
Circulation. 133:2279-2286
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2016.

Abstract

Background— The Endovascular Treatment for Small Core and Proximal Occlusion Ischemic Stroke (ESCAPE) trial used innovative imaging and aggressive target time metrics to demonstrate the benefit of endovascular treatment in patients with acute ischemic stroke. We analyze the impact of time on clinical outcome and the effect of patient, hospital, and health system characteristics on workflow within the trial. Methods and Results— Relationship between outcome (modified Rankin Scale) and interval times was modeled by using logistic regression. Association between time intervals (stroke onset to arrival in endovascular-capable hospital, to qualifying computed tomography, to groin puncture, and to reperfusion) and patient, hospital, and health system characteristics were modeled by using negative binomial regression. Every 30-minute increase in computed tomography-to-reperfusion time reduced the probability of achieving a functionally independent outcome (90-day modified Rankin Scale 0–2) by 8.3% ( P =0.006). Symptom onset-to-imaging time was not associated with outcome ( P >0.05). Onset-to-endovascular hospital arrival time was 42% (34 minutes) longer among patients receiving intravenous alteplase at the referring hospital (drip and ship) versus direct transfer (mothership). Computed tomography-to-groin puncture time was 15% (8 minutes) shorter among patients presenting during work hours versus off hours, 41% (24 minutes) shorter in drip-ship patients versus mothership, and 43% (22 minutes) longer when general anesthesia was administered. The use of a balloon guide catheter during endovascular procedures shortened puncture-to-reperfusion time by 21% (8 minutes). Conclusions— Imaging-to-reperfusion time is a significant predictor of outcome in the ESCAPE trial. Inefficiencies in triaging, off-hour presentation, intravenous alteplase administration, use of general anesthesia, and endovascular techniques offer major opportunities for improvement in workflow. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT01778335.

Details

ISSN :
15244539 and 00097322
Volume :
133
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Circulation
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........31d805d17ccbc5c987a73e7d56c3fdea