Door‐In–Door‐Out Time Effect on Clinical Outcome According to Reperfusion Time in Endovascular Treatment

Author:

Flores Alan1ORCID,SeróMD Laia1,Ustrell Xavier1,Pellisé Anna1,Viñas Jaume1,Rodriguez Paula1,Monterde Angela1,de Oliveira Gislaine Castilho1,Molina Carlos A.2,Cardona Pedro3,Valls Adrian4,Marti‐Fabregas Joan5,Giralt‐Steinhauer Eva6,Serena Joaquín7,Purroy Francisco8,Zaragoza‐Brunet José9,Barrachina Oriol10,Gomez‐Choco Manuel11,Palomeras Ernest12,Cocho Dolores13,Aragonés Josep Maria14,Pedroza Claudia15,Díaz Gloria16,Jimenez Xavier17,Garcia‐Tornel Alvaro2,Ribó Marc2,de la Ossa Natalia Perez18,

Affiliation:

1. Stroke Unit Neurology Department Hospital Universitari Joan XXIII Tarragona Spain

2. Stroke Unit Neurology Department Hospital Universitari Vall D’ Hebron Barcelona Spain

3. Stroke Unit Neurology Department Hospital Universitari Bellvitge Barcelona Spain

4. Neurology Department, Hospital Universitari Germans Trias i Pujol Badalona Barcelona Spain

5. Stroke Unit Hospital de Sant Pau Barcelona Spain

6. Servei de Neurologia IMIM‐Hospital del Mar Barcelona Spain

7. Stroke Unit Neurology Department Hospital Universitari Josep Trueta Girona Spain

8. Stroke Unit Neurology Department Hospital Arnau de Vilanova Lleida Spain

9. Stroke Unit Neurology Department Hospital Verge de la Cinta Tortosa Spain

10. Neurology Department Hospital Parc Tauli Sabadell Spain

11. Neurology Department Hospital Moises Broggi Barcelona Spain

12. Neurology Department Hospital de Mataro Barcelona Spain

13. Neurology Department Hospital de Granollers Granollers Spain

14. Hospital General de Vic Barcelona Spain

15. Fundació Sant Hospital La Seu d'Urgell Lleida Spain

16. Hospital Campdevànol Girona Spain

17. Servei d'Emergencies Mediques Hospitalet de Llobregat Barcelona Spain

18. Stroke Programme Agency for Health Quality and Assessment of Catalonia CIBER Epidemiología y Salud Publica (CIBERESP) Barcelona Spain

Abstract

Background Door‐in–door‐out time (DIDO) in nonthrombectomy stroke centers is a key performance indicator in acute stroke care. Nonetheless, the relative importance of DIDO on outcome in patients transferred for endovascular treatment (EVT) is not widely known. Therefore, we aim to explore the association between DIDO and clinical outcome according to onset to reperfusion time in patients undergoing EVT. Methods Observational multicenter study including patients transferred to a thrombectomy‐capable center from a local stroke center who underwent thrombectomy. The primary outcome was favorable clinical outcome, as evaluated by a modified Rankin Scale score of 0 to 2 at 3 months. We evaluated the association between DIDO and clinical outcome according to onset to reperfusion time and factors related to shorter DIDO time. Results Among 2710 patients transferred for thrombectomy evaluation, 970 (43.8%) patients received EVT. Median baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale and DIDO time were 12 (interquartile range [IQR], 6–19) and 83 minutes (IQR, 66–108), respectively. Among patients undergoing EVT, no association was found between DIDO and clinical outcome. Considering only patients treated in the early time window (onset to reperfusion time ≤240 minutes), patients with favorable outcome had a shorter DIDO (60 [IQR, 52–68] versus 73 [IQR, 61–83] minutes; P =0.013). A receiver operating characteristic curve identified a cutoff of 67 minutes of DIDO time that better predicted favorable outcome (sensitivity, 70%; specificity, 73%; area under the curve, 0.741). A multivariate analysis showed that DIDO ≤67 minutes emerged as an independent factor associated with favorable outcome (odds ratio [OR], 5.29 [95% CI, 1.38–20.27]; P =0.015). Door to computed tomography time was the only factor associated with DIDO ≤67 minutes (OR, 1.113 [95% CI, 1.018–1.261]; P =0.022) in a multivariate analysis in this time frame. Conclusions In transferred patients undergoing EVT, DIDO has a significant impact on clinical outcome, mainly in the first hours from stroke onset. A benchmark of 67 minutes in DIDO time is proposed. Shorter door to computed tomography time appears to be an independent factor associated to achieve DIDO time ≤67 minutes. Measures to optimize workflow into referral centers are warranted.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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