Title: The Future of Stroke Care
1The Future of Stroke Care
- Anil Sharma
- University Hospital Aintree
- Liverpool
2Stroke
- Third most common cause of death
- Commonest cause of severe disability
- 110,000 people in Wales and England have first
stroke per year - 30,000 go on to have further strokes
- Stroke costs about 2.4 billion in direct care
costs
3Age and Stroke
- Half of stroke patients are under 75 yrs of age
- 25 under 65 years
- 5 under 50 years
- Ageing population especially the increases in the
numbers of the very elderly will counterbalance
the benefits of primary prevention interventions
and the numbers of stroke patients will continue
to rise
4What can we improve on?
- Public health information
- Diagnosis
- Stroke is an emergency
- Better in hospital care
- Rapid access to CT Scanning
- Rapid access to specialised acute stroke units
- More Thrombolysis
5Time is Brain
- Key features of effective stroke care are
- Rapid access to specialised stroke services
- Early CT Brain scanning
6Where are the delays?
- Patient or family did not recognise symptoms or
seek urgent help - Patient or family did not call an ambulance
- Paramedics did not triage stroke as an emergency
- Delays in imaging
- Inefficient process of in-hospital emergency
stroke care
Kwan J et al. Age and Ageing 2004 33 116
7Referral
- The response to the diagnosis of stroke should
be - Urgent Referral to an acute stroke unit
8Time Dependent Services
9Pre-hospital Services
- Rapid access across the UK is well established
- National ORCON standard for stroke
- - Category B
- - 14/19 minutes
- Category A is 8 minutes
10Pre-hospital Services
- Stay and Play
- Versus
- Scoop and Run
11Which Hospital
- The nearest
- The nearest with a stroke unit
- The nearest with a stroke unit that is able to
thrombolyse if this is necessary.
12Pre-Hospital Solutions
- Reclassify acute stroke as Category A
- Scoop and run when A and B are sorted
- Use most appropriate means of transport
- Go to hospital which can thrombolyse which has a
stroke unit
13Time is Brain
14FAST
- Paramedics correctly recognised stroke 79 of the
time
Harbison, J. et al. Stroke 20033471-76
15Imaging
- CT scan
- Diffusion/perfusion MR
- MRA
- CTA
- DSA- occasionally only
16Urgent CT Head Scan
17Intra-cerebral haemorrhage
18Diffusion / Perfusion Mismatch and
MRAStaroselskaya Arch Neurol. 2001581069
19What is the pathological type of stroke?
Haemorrhage
Infarct
20What disease process caused the stroke?
- Large artery disease
- Cardioembolic
- Small vessel disease
21Ischaemic Penumbra
22Time is Brain
- Thrombolysis
- Optimising homeostasis
- Neuroprotection
23Early Treatment Remains Essential
- The effect size (OR 1.4) in the 3-4.5h is
confirmed by ASS III, and the confidence
intervals will significantly narrow in the new
pooled analysis, however, the differnce in effect
size compared with early treatment (OR 2.8)
remains
OR, odds ratio
Hacke et al. Lancet 2004 363 76874
24Remote Hospital
Stroke Center
Regional stroke ward
Up to 2 Mb/sec
CT/MRI
DICOM-Data
25Thrombolysis Rates for stroke
- UK lt 2
- Australia / USA 9
- Current rates at UHA 11
26MCA patency other methods
- Intra arterial tPA
- MERCI devices
- Sonothrombolysis
27Intraarterial thrombolysis
28Improvements in Diffusion and Perfusion
Abnormalities after Intra-arterial
tPA 27-Year-Old Woman with Left Hemiparesis
Brott, T. et al. N Engl J Med 2000343710-722
29Intra-arterial Thrombolysis (PROACT II n180)
JAMA 19992822003
30Hemicraniectomy/Decompression
- Recent trials have shown that hemicraniectomy in
patients with Malignant MCA syndrome is effective
- Close working with the neurosurgeons is essential
- Posterior fossa haemorrhage as well as infarcts
need close observation to consider early
decompression if necessary
31Stroke strategy
- Stroke networks
- Paramedics
- Regional stroke units 0.5-2 million pop.
- Hub and spoke
- Neuro units and role vis a vis regional units
- Stakeholders meetings
32SU versus conventional care
- Numbers needed to treat to prevent
- 1 death 32 (18-200)
- 1 new institutional admission 16 (10-43)
- 1 failure to regain independence 17 (11-45)
33Are there other factors that can predict the risk
of stroke in TIA?
- The ABCD2 Score
- Age
- Blood Pressure
- Clinical features
- Duration
- Diabetes
Rothwell PM et al. The Lancet 200536629
34ABCD2 score
- A- age 60yrs or more
1point - B- BP (at presentation) 140/90 or higher 1point
- C- Clinical features
- unilateral weakness
2points - speech disturbance without weakness
1point - D Duration
- 60 minutes
2points - 10-59 minutes
1point - Diabetes 1 point
- Low risk0-3
- Moderate risk4-5
- High risk6-7
35Cumulative risk of stroke after TIA
Definite TIAs
14
OXVASC
OCSP
12
10
8
All referrals
Risk of stroke ()
OXVASC
6
Hospital clinic
4
2
0
0
7
14
21
28
Days
Lancet 2005 366 29-36
36Imaging in TIAs
- Urgent CT scan adds little to the diagnosis and
management of TIAs in the absence of specific
features - MR diffusion weighted imaging
37DWI positivity in 175 TIA patients according to
ABCD score
p (trend) 0.008
38Carotid Endarterectomy
- Conventional wisdom
- /gt70 ICA stenosis operate/stent
- Newer evidence
- If done quickly, males with 50-70 stenosis with
multiple risk factors benefit from CEA
39The future - 1
- Primary prevention of vascular disease
- AF and anticoagulation newer agents
- Public awareness and education key to action
- Regional Specialist Stroke Units receiving stroke
patients from population base of 0.5 -2.0 million - Receiving units very closely linked with
Interventional Neuroradiology and Neurosurgery
40The future 2
- Specialist stroke team on duty 24/7
- No differences in approach to TIA or stroke
- Imaging modalities must be rapidly available
including 24/7 CT and MR perfusion and diffusion
imaging and treatment based on these as much as
on time windows - Rapid access to intraarterial treatment and clot
removal - Future use of sonothrombolysis may have a role to
play
41The future 3
- Immediate stroke unit care for all essential and
very effective - Stroke rehabilitation short and long term - and
carer support essential - Regular MDT review of patients and identification
of newer needs
42Conclusions
- Stroke/TIAs are an emergency
- Ambulance scoop and run blue light to nearest
APPROPRIATE stroke unit - 24/7 thrombolysis and more with cutting edge
imaging - Pathway for those who fail to recanalise at 1
hour - TIAs risk stratify and admit those who need
immediate assessment - TIA clinics daily and as one stop
- Urgent carotid endarterectomy not elective!