Conference Coverage

Direct transfer to angiography improves outcome in large-vessel stroke


 

FROM ISC 2021

The cost of speed

Commenting on the ANGIO-CAT study, Michael Hill, MD, a professor at the University of Calgary (Alta.), said the 27-minute improvement in door-to-reperfusion time achieved in the study was meaningful and correlates with the degree of improved outcomes observed. “So, the improvement in speed of treatment resulting in better outcomes makes sense,” he added.

He cautioned that this strategy would only be feasible in certain centers with selected patients and that cost will be a fundamental issue.

“If you identify patients at angiography, you risk having some patients with no target large-vessel occlusion,” Dr. Hill added. “The real question is, how many of these patients without a large-vessel occlusion can the system tolerate before it becomes uneconomical and not fruitful or harmful, given that groin puncture is not totally harmless?”

The moderator of the ISC news conference on the study, Mitchell Elkind, MD, professor of neurology at Columbia University, New York, who is also president of the American Stroke Association, said the study reflects the growing recognition of the importance of speed when treating stroke. “If we can shorten time to treatment using rapid evaluation and imaging protocols, this will help save brain,” he said.

Also commenting on the study, Louisa McCullough, MD, PhD, chief of neurology at Memorial Hermann Hospital–Texas Medical Center, Houston, who is the ISC meeting chair, said she thought the study would be relevant to the United States. “Speed is really of the essence. Whenever we can reduce delays, that will make a big difference to patients.”

Referring to this study on improving hospital systems, as well as a second study that was presented at the meeting that showed benefits from delivery of prehospital thrombolysis via a mobile stroke unit, Dr. McCullough added that “we need to set up models so we can get the best of both these worlds. These studies are really leading the way on how we can change the stroke systems of care.”

The study was funded by Vall d’Hebron Research Institute. Dr. Requena disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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