From the Journals

Cardiologists can perform stroke thrombectomy to fill ‘unmet need’


 

Editorial strongly supportive

An accompanying editorial strongly endorses the idea of using interdisciplinary teams to deliver high standard stroke care.

Marius Hornung, MD, and Horst Sievert, MD, from CardioVascular Center Frankfurt (Germany), point out that many experienced cardiologists are trained in performing carotid artery interventions and are therefore experienced in accessing the supra-aortic arteries.

Dr. Horst Sievert, CardioVascular Center Frankfurt (Germany) Ted Bosworth/MDedge News

Dr. Horst Sievert

“To be able to guarantee optimized stroke therapy as soon as possible, disputes over competence among the individual medical societies involved must be ended,” they wrote.

They advocate for the creation of interdisciplinary teams, with diagnostics, patient selection, and follow-up care remaining the core competencies and tasks of neurology; in addition, they call for appropriately trained and experienced physicians – regardless of their specialties – performing acute stroke interventions and endovascular thrombectomy.

“Such a network must be installed as soon as possible to fulfill the mantra ‘time is brain’ ... and not losing unnecessary time to patient transfer, or continuing to offer only the second-best therapy,” they concluded.

Opposition in the United States

Dr. Widimsky explained that this proposal may not be so applicable to the United States, where the need for more clinicians capable of performing stroke thrombectomies does not appear to be as critical, possibly because vascular neurosurgeons as well as neuroradiologists are qualified to undertake these procedures.

In an interview, J. Mocco, MD, director of the cerebrovascular center, department of neurological surgery, at Mount Sinai Health System, New York, confirmed that this was the case.

Dr. J. Mocco, Mount Sinai Health System, New York MDedge News

Dr. J. Mocco

“There is no legitimate data to support the claim that there is a lack of an adequate workforce to provide stroke thrombectomy, at least in the U.S.,” he said, adding that, rather, the primary limitation to patient access is a lack of adequate systems of care. “We should learn from the trauma model, which is strongly evidence based, and provide emergency stroke care in a similarly regionalized manner.”

Dr. Mocco, vice president of the Society of NeuroInterventional Surgery, was not impressed with the current study.

“This paper is a retrospective, single-center, unadjudicated, nonindependent assessor case series and therefore, as the authors acknowledge in the limitations section of their paper, it is invalid to compare these data to the results from high-quality, prospective, core-lab, and independent assessor adjudicated randomized trials,” he said. “The supposition that this trial provides evidence that the reported model should be widely considered lacks scientific rigor.”

Furthermore, “the interventional cardiology literature is replete with data regarding the importance of technical expertise and content knowledge,” he added. “Why would that community now propose that such expertise and knowledge is not necessary for the brain?”

Dr. Mocco argues that the concept that interventional cardiologists should be fast-tracked to perform stroke interventions because they use similar tools, navigate blood vessels, and are comfortable working in critical situations, does not hold up.

“Liver surgeons and brain surgeons are both familiar with tissue manipulation, are used to operating in critical situations, and use cautery, scissors, and scalpels; but no one would argue that a brain surgeon should be fast-tracked to perform liver surgery, or vice versa.”

He added: “Stroke patients do not have the luxury of choosing the physician who provides their thrombectomy. We should do everything reasonable to ensure that our systems of care are organized so that these vulnerable patients are treated by physicians who have appropriate knowledge and expertise.”

This study was supported by the Charles University Research program. The authors and editorialists have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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