医学
冲程(发动机)
析因分析
工作流程
事后
医学物理学
内科学
计算机科学
数据库
机械工程
工程类
作者
Alan Flores,Álvaro García‐Tornel,Laia Seró,Xavier Ustrell,Manuel Requena,Anna Pellisé,Paula Rodríguez,Angela Monterde,Lidia Lara,Jose Maria Gonzalez‐de‐Echavarri,Carlos A. Molina,Antonio Doncel-Moriano Cubero,Laura Dorado,Pedro Cardona,David Cánovas,Jerzy Krupiński,Natalia Más,Francisco Purroy,José Zaragoza‐Brunet,Ernesto Palomeras
标识
DOI:10.1136/jnis-2023-020125
摘要
Background The influence of vascular imaging acquisition on workflows at local stroke centers (LSCs) not capable of performing thrombectomy in patients with a suspected large vessel occlusion (LVO) stroke remains uncertain. We analyzed the impact of performing vascular imaging (VI+) or not (VI− at LSC arrival on variables related to workflows using data from the RACECAT Trial. Objective To compare workflows at the LSC among patients enrolled in the RACECAT Trial with or without VI acquisition. Methods We included patients with a diagnosis of ischemic stroke who were enrolled in the RACECAT Trial, a cluster-randomized trial that compared drip-n-ship versus mothership triage paradigms in patients with suspected acute LVO stroke allocated at the LSC. Outcome measures included time metrics related to workflows and the rate of interhospital transfers and thrombectomy among transferred patients. Results Among 467 patients allocated to a LSC, vascular imaging was acquired in 277 patients (59%), of whom 198 (71%) had a LVO. As compared with patients without vascular imaging, patients in the VI+ group were transferred less frequently as thrombectomy candidates to a thrombectomy-capable center (58% vs 74%, P=0.004), without significant differences in door-indoor-out time at the LSC (median minutes, VI+ 78 (IQR 69–96) vs VI− 76 (IQR 59–98), P=0.6). Among transferred patients, the VI+ group had higher rate of thrombectomy (69% vs 55%, P=0.016) and shorter door to puncture time (median minutes, VI+ 41 (IQR 26–53) vs VI− 54 (IQR 40–70), P<0.001). Conclusion Among patients with a suspected LVO stroke initially evaluated at a LSC, vascular imaging acquisition might improve workflow times at thrombectomy-capable centers and reduce the rate of futile interhospital transfers. These results deserve further evaluation and should be replicated in other settings and geographies.
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