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“Drip-and-ship” thrombolysis remains common for ischemic stroke

NASHVILLE, TENN. – About 25% of patients with ischemic stroke who receive thrombolytic therapy get it in the field before hospital transfer with the “drip-and-ship” paradigm.

While there were only modest differences in clinical outcomes between these patients and those treated when admitted to an emergency department, drip-and-ship may actually increase the overall use of tissue plasminogen activator (TPA), Dr. Kevin N. Sheth said at the International Stroke Conference, sponsored by the American Heart Association.

The retrospective analysis, which was simultaneously published in Stroke (2015 Feb. 11 [doi:10.1161/STROKEAHA.114.007506]), plumbed the Get With the Guidelines registry for data to describe trends in the use of TPA and drip-and-ship administration across the United States over time. The study involved 1,440 hospitals and 44,667 patients who had an ischemic stroke during 2003-2010 and received TPA. Of these, 10,475 (23.5%) received it in the field before optional admission and within 3 hours of symptom onset.

Dr. Kevin N. Sheth
Dr. Kevin N. Sheth

Baseline characteristics were similar between the treatment groups. The patients’ mean age was 70 years, and the sex distribution was evenly split. More than 75% of each group was white.

The National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score was significantly higher among those who presented for hospital treatment (12.9 vs. 11). However, these patients were seen before TPA administration, while the drip-and-ship group had already been treated, a temporal difference that could have accounted for the score finding, cautioned Dr. Sheth, director of the neuroscience ICU and chief of clinical research at Yale University, New Haven, Conn.

In hospitals that employed drip-and-ship, there were significantly higher rates of stroke patients treated each year as well as more beds. Those hospitals also were more often teaching facilities and were designated as a primary stroke center.

Drip-and-ship frequency remained fairly steady over the study period – about 25% of all eligible patients had it in both 2003 and 2010. Among those treated at the hospital, the frequency of TPA administration within 3 hours of stroke onset rose sharply over the study period, from about 11% in 2003 to 25% in 2010. In contrast, the percentage of timely thrombolysis in drip-and-ship patients moved very little, from about 5% to 9% over the same period.

Overall inpatient mortality was 10%, but was slightly higher among drip-and-ship patients (10.93% vs. 9.67). Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage occurred in 5.79% of those treated via drip-and-ship and 5.22% of those treated in the hospital. Nearly the same percentage of patients were discharged walking independently (38.4% vs. 38.8%) and discharged home (40.3% vs. 40.6%).

Among the hospital-treated patients, fewer than 4% (1,200) underwent endovascular therapy; this occurred in 707 (7%) of drip-and-ship patients. Those who got endovascular treatment had higher median NIHSS scores at TPA administration than did those who did not (17 vs. 12, respectively). Endovascular treatment was significantly associated with higher mortality (20% vs. 10%) and intracranial hemorrhage (11% vs. 5%).

In a multivariate analysis that adjusted for NIHSS score, in-hospital mortality was significantly more likely in drip-and-ship patients (odds ratio, 1.23). Those patients also were significantly less likely to be independently walking at discharge (OR, 0.66) or discharge to home (OR, 0.66). Intracranial hemorrhage was significantly more likely in drip-and-ship patients (OR, 1.4), as was a hospital stay of longer than 4 days (OR, 1.20).

“These are very modest differences clinically,” Dr. Sheth said, adding that selection bias or unmeasured confounding could have influenced the findings.

Dr. Sheth is a member of the Get with the Guidelines (GWTG) Stroke Clinical Workgroup, and he is a coinvestigator and executive committee member for Glyburide Advantage in Malignant Edema and Stroke-Remedy Pharmaceuticals (GAMES-RP), a phase II trial to prevent swelling in patients with large stroke, funded by Remedy Pharmaceuticals.

msullivan@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @alz_gal

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NASHVILLE, TENN. – About 25% of patients with ischemic stroke who receive thrombolytic therapy get it in the field before hospital transfer with the “drip-and-ship” paradigm.

While there were only modest differences in clinical outcomes between these patients and those treated when admitted to an emergency department, drip-and-ship may actually increase the overall use of tissue plasminogen activator (TPA), Dr. Kevin N. Sheth said at the International Stroke Conference, sponsored by the American Heart Association.

The retrospective analysis, which was simultaneously published in Stroke (2015 Feb. 11 [doi:10.1161/STROKEAHA.114.007506]), plumbed the Get With the Guidelines registry for data to describe trends in the use of TPA and drip-and-ship administration across the United States over time. The study involved 1,440 hospitals and 44,667 patients who had an ischemic stroke during 2003-2010 and received TPA. Of these, 10,475 (23.5%) received it in the field before optional admission and within 3 hours of symptom onset.

Dr. Kevin N. Sheth
Dr. Kevin N. Sheth

Baseline characteristics were similar between the treatment groups. The patients’ mean age was 70 years, and the sex distribution was evenly split. More than 75% of each group was white.

The National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score was significantly higher among those who presented for hospital treatment (12.9 vs. 11). However, these patients were seen before TPA administration, while the drip-and-ship group had already been treated, a temporal difference that could have accounted for the score finding, cautioned Dr. Sheth, director of the neuroscience ICU and chief of clinical research at Yale University, New Haven, Conn.

In hospitals that employed drip-and-ship, there were significantly higher rates of stroke patients treated each year as well as more beds. Those hospitals also were more often teaching facilities and were designated as a primary stroke center.

Drip-and-ship frequency remained fairly steady over the study period – about 25% of all eligible patients had it in both 2003 and 2010. Among those treated at the hospital, the frequency of TPA administration within 3 hours of stroke onset rose sharply over the study period, from about 11% in 2003 to 25% in 2010. In contrast, the percentage of timely thrombolysis in drip-and-ship patients moved very little, from about 5% to 9% over the same period.

Overall inpatient mortality was 10%, but was slightly higher among drip-and-ship patients (10.93% vs. 9.67). Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage occurred in 5.79% of those treated via drip-and-ship and 5.22% of those treated in the hospital. Nearly the same percentage of patients were discharged walking independently (38.4% vs. 38.8%) and discharged home (40.3% vs. 40.6%).

Among the hospital-treated patients, fewer than 4% (1,200) underwent endovascular therapy; this occurred in 707 (7%) of drip-and-ship patients. Those who got endovascular treatment had higher median NIHSS scores at TPA administration than did those who did not (17 vs. 12, respectively). Endovascular treatment was significantly associated with higher mortality (20% vs. 10%) and intracranial hemorrhage (11% vs. 5%).

In a multivariate analysis that adjusted for NIHSS score, in-hospital mortality was significantly more likely in drip-and-ship patients (odds ratio, 1.23). Those patients also were significantly less likely to be independently walking at discharge (OR, 0.66) or discharge to home (OR, 0.66). Intracranial hemorrhage was significantly more likely in drip-and-ship patients (OR, 1.4), as was a hospital stay of longer than 4 days (OR, 1.20).

“These are very modest differences clinically,” Dr. Sheth said, adding that selection bias or unmeasured confounding could have influenced the findings.

Dr. Sheth is a member of the Get with the Guidelines (GWTG) Stroke Clinical Workgroup, and he is a coinvestigator and executive committee member for Glyburide Advantage in Malignant Edema and Stroke-Remedy Pharmaceuticals (GAMES-RP), a phase II trial to prevent swelling in patients with large stroke, funded by Remedy Pharmaceuticals.

msullivan@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @alz_gal

NASHVILLE, TENN. – About 25% of patients with ischemic stroke who receive thrombolytic therapy get it in the field before hospital transfer with the “drip-and-ship” paradigm.

While there were only modest differences in clinical outcomes between these patients and those treated when admitted to an emergency department, drip-and-ship may actually increase the overall use of tissue plasminogen activator (TPA), Dr. Kevin N. Sheth said at the International Stroke Conference, sponsored by the American Heart Association.

The retrospective analysis, which was simultaneously published in Stroke (2015 Feb. 11 [doi:10.1161/STROKEAHA.114.007506]), plumbed the Get With the Guidelines registry for data to describe trends in the use of TPA and drip-and-ship administration across the United States over time. The study involved 1,440 hospitals and 44,667 patients who had an ischemic stroke during 2003-2010 and received TPA. Of these, 10,475 (23.5%) received it in the field before optional admission and within 3 hours of symptom onset.

Dr. Kevin N. Sheth
Dr. Kevin N. Sheth

Baseline characteristics were similar between the treatment groups. The patients’ mean age was 70 years, and the sex distribution was evenly split. More than 75% of each group was white.

The National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score was significantly higher among those who presented for hospital treatment (12.9 vs. 11). However, these patients were seen before TPA administration, while the drip-and-ship group had already been treated, a temporal difference that could have accounted for the score finding, cautioned Dr. Sheth, director of the neuroscience ICU and chief of clinical research at Yale University, New Haven, Conn.

In hospitals that employed drip-and-ship, there were significantly higher rates of stroke patients treated each year as well as more beds. Those hospitals also were more often teaching facilities and were designated as a primary stroke center.

Drip-and-ship frequency remained fairly steady over the study period – about 25% of all eligible patients had it in both 2003 and 2010. Among those treated at the hospital, the frequency of TPA administration within 3 hours of stroke onset rose sharply over the study period, from about 11% in 2003 to 25% in 2010. In contrast, the percentage of timely thrombolysis in drip-and-ship patients moved very little, from about 5% to 9% over the same period.

Overall inpatient mortality was 10%, but was slightly higher among drip-and-ship patients (10.93% vs. 9.67). Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage occurred in 5.79% of those treated via drip-and-ship and 5.22% of those treated in the hospital. Nearly the same percentage of patients were discharged walking independently (38.4% vs. 38.8%) and discharged home (40.3% vs. 40.6%).

Among the hospital-treated patients, fewer than 4% (1,200) underwent endovascular therapy; this occurred in 707 (7%) of drip-and-ship patients. Those who got endovascular treatment had higher median NIHSS scores at TPA administration than did those who did not (17 vs. 12, respectively). Endovascular treatment was significantly associated with higher mortality (20% vs. 10%) and intracranial hemorrhage (11% vs. 5%).

In a multivariate analysis that adjusted for NIHSS score, in-hospital mortality was significantly more likely in drip-and-ship patients (odds ratio, 1.23). Those patients also were significantly less likely to be independently walking at discharge (OR, 0.66) or discharge to home (OR, 0.66). Intracranial hemorrhage was significantly more likely in drip-and-ship patients (OR, 1.4), as was a hospital stay of longer than 4 days (OR, 1.20).

“These are very modest differences clinically,” Dr. Sheth said, adding that selection bias or unmeasured confounding could have influenced the findings.

Dr. Sheth is a member of the Get with the Guidelines (GWTG) Stroke Clinical Workgroup, and he is a coinvestigator and executive committee member for Glyburide Advantage in Malignant Edema and Stroke-Remedy Pharmaceuticals (GAMES-RP), a phase II trial to prevent swelling in patients with large stroke, funded by Remedy Pharmaceuticals.

msullivan@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @alz_gal

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“Drip-and-ship” thrombolysis remains common for ischemic stroke
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AT THE INTERNATIONAL STROKE CONFERENCE

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Key clinical point: The rate of thrombolysis for ischemic stroke via drip-and-ship has remained steady over the past 12 years.

Major finding: About a quarter of ischemic stroke patients eligible for TPA are getting it in the field, via the “drip-and-ship” paradigm.

Data source: A retrospective study comprising 44,667 patients with ischemic stroke.

Disclosures: Dr. Sheth is a member of the Get with the Guidelines (GWTG) Stroke Clinical Workgroup, and he is a coinvestigator and executive committee member for Glyburide Advantage in Malignant Edema and Stroke-Remedy Pharmaceuticals (GAMES-RP), a phase II trial to prevent swelling in patients with large stroke, funded by Remedy Pharmaceuticals.