The primary goal of this project is to carry out a trial comparing pre-hospital diagnosis and treatment of patients with stroke symptoms using a Mobile Stroke Unit (MSU) with subsequent transfer to a Comprehensive Stroke Center (CSC) Emergency Department (ED) for further management, to standard pre-hospital triage and transport by Emergency Medical Services (EMS) to a CSC ED for evaluation and treatment (Standard Management-SM).
There are many ways that use of a MSU might prove valuable in stroke patients, but we will focus on acute ischemic stroke (AIS) and treatment with IV tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) within 4.5 hours of symptom onset since that is the most evidence based effective emergency treatment for the most prevalent stroke diagnosis. We hypothesize that the MSU pathway will result in an overall shift towards earlier evaluation and treatment, particularly into the first hour after symptom onset, leading to substantially better outcome. We also hypothesize that as a result of improved clinical outcomes resulting from earlier treatment, the costs of a MSU program will be offset by a reduction in the costs of long term stroke care and increase in quality adjusted life years, thereby supporting more widespread use of this technology. To make MSU deployment more practical, we will confirm that a Vascular Neurologist (VN) on board the MSU can be replaced by a remote VN connected to the MSU by telemedicine (TM) thereby reducing manpower requirements and costs. The successful completion of this project will provide data on important outcomes and costs associated with the use of MSU vs SM in the United States (U.S.) that will help determine the value of integrating MSUs into the pre-hospital environment in this country. Successfully addressing our three Specific Aims (time saved/ complications encountered, utility of TM, and cost effectiveness) will provide critical information that will be needed to determine if and how a subsequent more definitive study should be conducted. We anticipate that emanating from this exploratory study would be a larger multicenter trial carried out in both urban and rural U.S. pre-hospital environments, with treatment orchestrated via TM, and having sufficient power to determine a difference in long term outcome and costs between patients managed on the two pathways, following a study design that will be tested in this exploratory trial. The present study, therefore, is the necessary first step in a process which may dramatically modify the way that acute stroke patients are managed in the U.S.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
1,038
Mobile Stroke Unit is a standard 12' Houston Fire Department ambulance equipped with point of care lab, CT scanner and staffed by a Vascular Neurologist, Registered Nurse with acute stroke and research experience, CT Technician and a Registered EMT-P. The MSU is dispatched in coordination with Houston, Bellaire and West University fire department/emergency medical services.
University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston
Houston, Texas, United States
Utility-weighted modified Rankin Scale (uw-mRS) from baseline to 90 days
Comparing patients found eligible for tPA (based on a blinded review of the patient's chart, regardless of whether they were treated or not) on MSU weeks compared to SM weeks. With a sample size of 693 total tPA-eligible patients (446 MSU and 247 SM patients, assuming 10% lost to follow-up), the study will have 80% power with a 0.05 Type I error rate to detect a difference between groups of 0.09 in the mean uw-mRS using a two-sample t-test.At total of 693 tPA treated patients will allow 85% power to detect a 25 min decrease in time to treatment between the two groups using a one- sided alpha level of 0.05
Time frame: 90 days (+/- 10 days) from date of enrollment
Agreement between on scene Vascular Neurologist vs. Remote (Telemedicine) Vascular Neurologist
The agreement between a VN remotely assessing a suspected stroke patient via TM in the MSU and in-person assessment by a VN in the MSU will be assessed by using the Kappa statistic. We anticipate that the estimated sample size of 162 is needed to allow us 90 % power to detect 90% agreement between the in-person assessment and the TM.
Time frame: up to 4.5 hours from symptom onset
Cost Effectiveness (N.B. The BEST-MSU study including measurement of heatlhcare utilization is funded by PCORI. The cost-effectiveness measures are not covered by PCORI funding and will be reported separately)
Cost Effectiveness as measured by average patient QALYs, post-stroke healthcare utilization, incremental fixed costs associated with MSU and the per-patient incremental fixed cost due the ambulance outfitting, CT, other equipment, telemedicine technology and staffing requirements.
Time frame: up to 1 year from date of enrollment
90 day Modified Rankin Score
90 day Modified Rankin Score 0,1 vs 2-6, and ordinal shift analysis, of patients treated with tPA within 60 minutes of symptom onset according to published guidelines on either MSU or SM weeks, compared to similar patients treated 61-270 minutes after onset, adjusting for any imbalances in stroke severity (baseline NIHSS) between the groups at the time of treatment.
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Time frame: 90 days (+/- 10 days) from date of enrollment
90 day Modified Rankin Score
90 day Modified Rankin Score 0,1 vs 2-6, and ordinal shift analysis, of all patients meeting published guidelines for treatment with tPA within 4.5 hours of symptom onset (whether eventually treated or not) on MSU weeks compared to patients meeting the same criteria (whether treated or not) on SM weeks, adjusting for any imbalances in stroke severity (baseline NIHSS) between the groups at the time of treatment.
Time frame: 90 days (+/- 10 days) from date of enrollment
Time from symptom onset to tPA treatment
The time from LSN to tPA treatment on all patients treated within 4.5 hours of LSN on MSU weeks compared to similarly eligible patients on SM weeks.
Time frame: up to 4.5 hours from symptom onset
Time from symptom onset to Endovascular treatment
The time from LSN and from ED arrival to start of endovascular procedure (intra-arterial thrombectomy-IAT) in patients who meet pre-specified criteria for IAT on MSU weeks compared to SM weeks.
Time frame: up to 6 hours from symptom onset
Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage and mortality
The incidence of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (sICH) and mortality in tPA treated patients on MSU weeks compared to SM weeks (Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage defined as any intracranial blood accumulation associated with a clinical deterioration of 4 points of the NIHSS for which the hemorrhage has been identified as the dominating cause of the neurologic deterioration)
Time frame: up to hospital discharge
Stroke mimics
The incidence of stroke mimics and transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) in tPA treated patients on MSU weeks compared to SM weeks.
Time frame: up to hospital discharge