4.7 Article

The Golden Hour and Acute Brain Ischemia Presenting Features and Lytic Therapy in >30 000 Patients Arriving Within 60 Minutes of Stroke Onset

Journal

STROKE
Volume 41, Issue 7, Pages 1431-1439

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.110.583815

Keywords

acute care; acute therapy; acute stroke; emergency medical services; emergency medicine; stroke care; stroke delivery; therapy; thrombolysis; thrombolytic therapy

Funding

  1. American Heart Association
  2. American Stroke Association
  3. Pfizer, Inc, New York, NY
  4. Merck-Schering Plough
  5. American Heart Association PRT Outcomes Research Center
  6. NIH-NINDS [P50 NS044378, U01 NS 44364]
  7. Boehringer Ingelheim
  8. NIH [NINDS R01 NS062028]
  9. Canadian Stroke Network
  10. Hotchkiss Brain Institute
  11. Canadian Institutes for Health Research
  12. NIH
  13. Michigan Stroke Registry

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Background and Purpose-The benefit of intravenous thrombolytic therapy in acute brain ischemia is strongly time dependent. Methods-The Get With the Guidelines-Stroke database was analyzed to characterize ischemic stroke patients arriving at hospital Emergency Departments within 60 minutes of the last known well time from April 1, 2003, to December 30, 2007. Results-During the 4.75-year study period, among 253 148 ischemic stroke patients arriving directly by ambulance or private vehicle at 905 hospital Emergency Departments, 106 924 (42.2%) had documented, exact last known well times. Onset to door time was <= 60 minutes in 30 220 (28.3%), 61 to 180 minutes in 33 858 (31.7%), and >180 minutes in 42 846 (40.1%). Features most strongly distinguishing the patients arriving at <= 60, 61 to 180, and >180 minutes were greater stroke severity (median National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score, 8.0 vs 6.0 vs 4.0, P<0.0001) and more frequent arrival by ambulance (79.0%. vs 72.2% vs 55.0%, P<0.0001). Compared with patients arriving at 61 to 180 minute, golden hour patients received intravenous thrombolytic therapy more frequently (27.1% vs 12.9%; odds ratio=2.51; 95% CI, 2.41-2.61; P<0.0001), but door-to-needle time was longer (mean, 90.6 vs 76.7 minutes, P<0.0001). A door-to-needle time of <= 60 minutes was achieved in 18.3% of golden hour patients. Conclusions-At Get With the Guidelines-Stroke hospital Emergency Departments, more than one quarter of patients with documented onset time and at least one eighth of all ischemic stroke patients arrived within 1 hour of onset, where they received thrombolytic therapy more frequently but more slowly than late arrivers. These findings support public health initiates to increase early presentation and shorten door-to-needle times in patients arriving within the golden hour. (Stroke. 2010;41:1431-1439.)

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