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National implementation of reperfusion for acute ischaemic stroke in England: How should services be configured? A modelling study

OBJECTIVES: To guide policy when planning thrombolysis (IVT) and thrombectomy (MT) services for acute stroke in England, focussing on the choice between ‘mothership’ (direct conveyance to an MT centre) and ‘drip-and-ship’ (secondary transfer) provision and the impact of bypassing local acute stroke...

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Autores principales: Allen, Michael, Pearn, Kerry, Ford, Gary A, White, Phil, Rudd, Anthony G, McMeekin, Peter, Stein, Ken, James, Martin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8921787/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35300255
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23969873211063323
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author Allen, Michael
Pearn, Kerry
Ford, Gary A
White, Phil
Rudd, Anthony G
McMeekin, Peter
Stein, Ken
James, Martin
author_facet Allen, Michael
Pearn, Kerry
Ford, Gary A
White, Phil
Rudd, Anthony G
McMeekin, Peter
Stein, Ken
James, Martin
author_sort Allen, Michael
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: To guide policy when planning thrombolysis (IVT) and thrombectomy (MT) services for acute stroke in England, focussing on the choice between ‘mothership’ (direct conveyance to an MT centre) and ‘drip-and-ship’ (secondary transfer) provision and the impact of bypassing local acute stroke centres. DESIGN: Outcome-based modelling study. SETTING: 107 acute stroke centres in England, 24 of which provide IVT and MT (IVT/MT centres) and 83 provide only IVT (IVT-only units). PARTICIPANTS: 242,874 emergency admissions with acute stroke over 3 years (2015–2017). INTERVENTION: Reperfusion delivered by drip-and-ship, mothership or ‘hybrid’ models; impact of additional travel time to directly access an IVT/MT centre by bypassing a more local IVT-only unit; effect of pre-hospital selection for large artery occlusion (LAO). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Population benefit from reperfusion, time to IVT and MT, admission numbers to IVT-only units and IVT/MT centres. RESULTS: Without pre-hospital selection for LAO, 94% of the population of England live in areas where the greatest clinical benefit, assuming unknown patient status, accrues from direct conveyance to an IVT/MT centre. However, this policy produces unsustainable admission numbers at these centres, with 78 out of 83 IVT-only units receiving fewer than 300 admissions per year (compared to 3 with drip-and-ship). Implementing a maximum permitted additional travel time to bypass an IVT-only unit, using a pre-hospital test for LAO, and selecting patients based on stroke onset time, all help to mitigate the destabilising effect but there is still some significant disruption to admission numbers, and improved selection of patients suitable for MT selectively reduces the number of patients who would receive IVT at IVT-only centres, challenging the sustainability of IVT expertise in IVT-only centres. CONCLUSIONS: Implementation of reperfusion for acute stroke based solely on achieving the maximum population benefit potentially leads to destabilisation of the emergency stroke care system. Careful planning is required to create a sustainable system, and modelling may be used to help planners maximise benefit from reperfusion while creating a sustainable emergency stroke care system.
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spelling pubmed-89217872022-03-16 National implementation of reperfusion for acute ischaemic stroke in England: How should services be configured? A modelling study Allen, Michael Pearn, Kerry Ford, Gary A White, Phil Rudd, Anthony G McMeekin, Peter Stein, Ken James, Martin Eur Stroke J Original Research Articles OBJECTIVES: To guide policy when planning thrombolysis (IVT) and thrombectomy (MT) services for acute stroke in England, focussing on the choice between ‘mothership’ (direct conveyance to an MT centre) and ‘drip-and-ship’ (secondary transfer) provision and the impact of bypassing local acute stroke centres. DESIGN: Outcome-based modelling study. SETTING: 107 acute stroke centres in England, 24 of which provide IVT and MT (IVT/MT centres) and 83 provide only IVT (IVT-only units). PARTICIPANTS: 242,874 emergency admissions with acute stroke over 3 years (2015–2017). INTERVENTION: Reperfusion delivered by drip-and-ship, mothership or ‘hybrid’ models; impact of additional travel time to directly access an IVT/MT centre by bypassing a more local IVT-only unit; effect of pre-hospital selection for large artery occlusion (LAO). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Population benefit from reperfusion, time to IVT and MT, admission numbers to IVT-only units and IVT/MT centres. RESULTS: Without pre-hospital selection for LAO, 94% of the population of England live in areas where the greatest clinical benefit, assuming unknown patient status, accrues from direct conveyance to an IVT/MT centre. However, this policy produces unsustainable admission numbers at these centres, with 78 out of 83 IVT-only units receiving fewer than 300 admissions per year (compared to 3 with drip-and-ship). Implementing a maximum permitted additional travel time to bypass an IVT-only unit, using a pre-hospital test for LAO, and selecting patients based on stroke onset time, all help to mitigate the destabilising effect but there is still some significant disruption to admission numbers, and improved selection of patients suitable for MT selectively reduces the number of patients who would receive IVT at IVT-only centres, challenging the sustainability of IVT expertise in IVT-only centres. CONCLUSIONS: Implementation of reperfusion for acute stroke based solely on achieving the maximum population benefit potentially leads to destabilisation of the emergency stroke care system. Careful planning is required to create a sustainable system, and modelling may be used to help planners maximise benefit from reperfusion while creating a sustainable emergency stroke care system. SAGE Publications 2021-12-23 2022-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8921787/ /pubmed/35300255 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23969873211063323 Text en © European Stroke Organisation 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits any use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Original Research Articles
Allen, Michael
Pearn, Kerry
Ford, Gary A
White, Phil
Rudd, Anthony G
McMeekin, Peter
Stein, Ken
James, Martin
National implementation of reperfusion for acute ischaemic stroke in England: How should services be configured? A modelling study
title National implementation of reperfusion for acute ischaemic stroke in England: How should services be configured? A modelling study
title_full National implementation of reperfusion for acute ischaemic stroke in England: How should services be configured? A modelling study
title_fullStr National implementation of reperfusion for acute ischaemic stroke in England: How should services be configured? A modelling study
title_full_unstemmed National implementation of reperfusion for acute ischaemic stroke in England: How should services be configured? A modelling study
title_short National implementation of reperfusion for acute ischaemic stroke in England: How should services be configured? A modelling study
title_sort national implementation of reperfusion for acute ischaemic stroke in england: how should services be configured? a modelling study
topic Original Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8921787/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35300255
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23969873211063323
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