Deakin University
Browse

Melbourne mobile stroke unit and reperfusion therapy: greater clinical impact of thrombectomy than thrombolysis

Download (669.82 kB)
Version 2 2024-06-04, 05:38
Version 1 2020-05-11, 13:28
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 05:38 authored by H Zhao, S Coote, D Easton, F Langenberg, M Stephenson, K Smith, S Bernard, DA Cadilhac, J Kim, CF Bladin, L Churilov, DE Crompton, HM Dewey, LM Sanders, T Wijeratne, G Cloud, DM Brooks, Hamed AsadiHamed Asadi, V Thijs, RV Chandra, H Ma, PM Desmond, RJ Dowling, PJ Mitchell, N Yassi, B Yan, BCV Campbell, MW Parsons, GA Donnan, SM Davis
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.

History

Journal

Stroke

Volume

51

Pagination

922-930

Location

Philadelphia, Pa.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0039-2499

eISSN

1524-4628

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

3

Publisher

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins