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Mortality after mechanical thrombectomy in anterior circulation stroke may be higher at nighttime and on weekends

Authors :
Zaeske, C.
Goertz, L.
Kottlors, J.
Schlamann, M.
Onur, O. A.
Maus, V.
Mpotsaris, A.
Liebig, T.
Forbrig, R.
Kabbasch, C.
Abdullayev, N.
Zaeske, C.
Goertz, L.
Kottlors, J.
Schlamann, M.
Onur, O. A.
Maus, V.
Mpotsaris, A.
Liebig, T.
Forbrig, R.
Kabbasch, C.
Abdullayev, N.

Abstract

Objectives The objective of this study was to compare clinical outcome and procedural differences of mechanical thrombectomy (MT) during on-call with regular operating hours. We particularly focused on dosimetric data which may serve as potential surrogates for patient outcome. Methods A total of 246 consecutive patients who underwent MT in acute anterior circulation stroke between November 2017 and March 2020 were retrospectively included. Patients treated (1) during standard operational hours (n = 102), (2) daytime on-call duty (n = 38) and (3) nighttime on-call duty (n = 106) were compared with respect to their pre-interventional status, procedural specifics, including dosimetrics (dose area product (DAP), fluoroscopy time and procedural time), and outcome. Results The collectives treated outside the regular operational hours showed an increased in-hospital mortality (standard operational hours 7% (7/102), daytime on-call duty 16% (6/38), nighttime on-call duty 20% (21/106), p = 0.02). Neither the dosimetric parameters nor baseline characteristics other procedural specifics and outcome parameters differed significantly between groups (p > 0.05 each). In most cases (> 90%), a successful reperfusion was achieved (TICI >= 2b). Conclusions We found an increased in-hospital mortality in patients admitted at night and during weekends which was not explained by technical aspects of MT.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1238104126
Document Type :
Electronic Resource