Fujita Medical Journal (Aug 2022)

Delays in initial workflow cause delayed initiation of mechanical thrombectomy in patients with in-hospital ischemic stroke

  • Kenichiro Suyama,
  • Shoji Matsumoto,
  • Ichiro Nakahara,
  • Yoshio Suyama,
  • Jun Morioka,
  • Akiko Hasebe,
  • Jun Tanabe,
  • Sadayoshi Watanabe,
  • Kiyonori Kuwahara,
  • Yuichi Hirose

DOI
https://doi.org/10.20407/fmj.2021-014
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
pp. 73 – 78

Abstract

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Objectives: The benefit of mechanical thrombectomy for acute ischemic stroke is highly time dependent. However, time to treatment is longer for in-hospital stroke patients than community-onset stroke patients. This study aimed to clarify the cause of this difference. Methods: A retrospective single-center study was performed to analyze patients with large vessel occlusion who underwent mechanical thrombectomy between January 2017 and December 2019. Patients were divided into in-hospital stroke and community-onset stroke groups. Clinical characteristics and treatment time intervals were compared between groups. Results: One hundred four patients were analyzed: 17 with in-hospital stroke and 87 with community-onset stroke. Patient characteristics did not significantly differ between groups. Median door (stroke recognition)-to-computed tomography time (36 min vs. 14 min, P<0.01) and door-to-puncture time (135 min vs. 117 min, P=0.02) were significantly longer in the in-hospital stroke group than the community-onset stroke group. However, median computed tomography-to-puncture time (104 min vs. 104 min, P=0.47) and puncture-to-reperfusion time (53 min vs. 38 min, P=0.17) did not significantly differ. Conclusions: Longer door-to-puncture time in in-hospital stroke patients was mostly caused by longer door-to-computed tomography time, which is the initial part of the workflow. An in-hospital stroke protocol that places importance on early stroke specialist consultation and prompt transportation to the computed tomography scanner might hasten treatment and improve outcomes in patients with in-hospital stroke.

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