Time of day and endovascular treatment decision in acute stroke with relative endovascular treatment indication: insights from UNMASK EVT international survey

Author:

Ospel Johanna MariaORCID,Kashani Nima,Goyal Mayank,Menon Bijoy K,Campbell Bruce C V,Fischer Urs,Turjman Francis,Mitchell Peter,Yoshimura Shinichi,Podlasek Anna,Rabinstein Alejandro A,Wilson Alexis T,Kim Byung Moon,Baxter Blaise W,Cherian Mathew P,Heo Ji Hoe,Foss Mona,Demchuk Andrew M,Sylaja Pillai N,Hill Michael D,Saposnik Gustavo,Almekhlafi Mohammed AORCID

Abstract

Background and purposeThe decision to proceed with endovascular thrombectomy should ideally be made independent of inconvenience factors, such as daytime. We assessed the influence of patient presentation time on endovascular therapy decision making under current local resources and assumed ideal conditions in acute ischemic stroke with level 2B evidence for endovascular treatment.Methods and materialsIn an international cross sectional survey, 607 stroke physicians from 38 countries were asked to give their treatment decisions to 10 out of 22 randomly assigned case scenarios. Eleven scenarios had level 2B evidence for endovascular treatment: 7 daytime scenarios (7:00 am–5:00 pm) and four night time cases (5:01 pm– 6:59 am). Participants provided their treatment approach assuming (A) there were no practice constraints and (B) under their current local resources. Endovascular treatment decisions in the 11 scenarios were analyzed according to presentation time with adjustment for patient and physician characteristics.ResultsParticipants selected endovascular therapy in 74.2% under assumed ideal conditions, and 70.7% under their current local resources of night time scenarios, and in 67.2% and 63.8% of daytime scenarios. Night time presentation did not increase the probability of a treatment decision against endovascular therapy under current local resources or assumed ideal conditions.ConclusionPresentation time did not influence endovascular treatment decision making in stroke patients in this international survey.

Funder

Stryker

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Clinical Neurology,General Medicine,Surgery

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