From the Journals

Telestroke Outcomes Rival Traditional Care


 

FROM FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY, INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF STROKE, AND ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY

Three recent publications highlight the ability of telestroke protocols not only to match the quality of in-person care, but in some instances to exceed it. These studies set the stage for larger studies comparing outcomes and efficiency of various telemedicine and transport models and gauging stakeholder satisfaction, authors said.

Surprising Results

In a single-site retrospective comparison of 252 patients with acute stroke assessed under an in-house telestroke protocol and 2437 assessed in person, telestroke provided statistically significant advantages in the following areas:

  • Door-to-imaging times (median: 38 minutes vs 44)
  • Rates of intravenous (18.2% vs 8.6%) and mechanical (10.4% vs 5.1%) treatment
  • Length of stay (median: 6 days vs 8)
  • Symptomatic hemorrhagic transformation rate (1.1% vs 5.1%)
  • Mortality (6.7% vs 11.1%)
Rodrigo Meirelles Massaud, MD, is a neurologist at the Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein in São Paulo, Brazil.

Dr. Rodrigo Meirelles Massaud

The better metrics observed in the telestroke group were especially surprising, said lead author Rodrigo Meirelles Massaud, MD, because the same team of neurologists conducted both types of evaluations. “This consistency ensures that the quality and expertise of medical care were maintained across both groups,” said Dr. Massaud, a neurologist at the Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein in São Paulo, Brazil. The study appeared online in Frontiers in Neurology.

The findings also counter the preconceived notion that distance medicine could be inferior because of the inability to conduct direct physical examinations and the potential for communication failures, he said. The telestroke group’s younger average age (63.5 years vs 69.5 years) and lower initial National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) scores — 2 versus 3 — might explain the disparity, Dr. Massaud added, because both factors augur improved outcomes.

Conversely, the authors wrote that the in-person group’s lower median door-to-groin puncture time in ischemic stroke (103.5 minutes vs 151.5 for telemedicine) likely resulted from the need to transport patients from satellite facilities to a hub hospital with neurologists on continuous standby. After adjustment for initial NIHSS score and age, both groups achieved similar percentages of patients with modified Rankin Scale (mRS) scores of 0-2 at discharge: 58.5% for in-person evaluation versus 61.9% for telemedicine (P = .028).

Acute Ischemic Stroke

In another study, a systematic review that included 7396 thrombolysed patients with acute ischemic stroke, odds ratios (ORs) revealed no significant differences between telestroke and in-person care for the percentage of mRS scores 0-2 at discharge (1.06; P = .5), 90-day mortality (OR, 1.16; P = .17), and symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (OR, 0.99; P = .93). The study appeared in the March International Journal of Stroke.

Ahmed Mohamed is pursuing a Master of Health Sciences in Medical Physiology degree at the University of Toronto Temerty Faculty of Medicine.

Ahmed Mohamed

The lack of significant differences between telestroke and in-person care regarding mortality and mRS scores of 0-2 (which defines a good outcome) surprised researchers, said lead author Ahmed Mohamed, who is completing a master of health sciences degree in medical physiology at the University of Toronto Temerty Faculty of Medicine, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

“When we were starting this project,” he said, “we thought that telemedicine would probably take longer than conventional treatment.” And waiting longer for treatment — especially for patients with acute ischemic stroke — leads to worse outcomes. “However,” Mr. Mohamed said, “that wasn’t the case.” Additional measures that showed no significant differences included rates of intravenous tissue plasminogen activator (ivtPA) use and endovascular mechanical thrombectomy.

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