CT Interpretation in a Telestroke Network

Author:

Demaerschalk Bart M.1,Bobrow Bentley J.1,Raman Rema1,Ernstrom Karin1,Hoxworth Joseph M.1,Patel Ameet C.1,Kiernan Terri-Ellen J.1,Aguilar Maria I.1,Ingall Timothy J.1,Dodick David W.1,Meyer Brett C.1,

Affiliation:

1. From the Mayo Clinic, Department of Neurology, Phoenix, AZ (B.M.D., T.-E.J.K., M.I.A., T.J.I., D.W.D.); Maricopa Integrated Health System, Emergency Medicine Department, Phoenix, AZ (B.J.B.); the Departments of Neurosciences (R.R., B.C.M.) and Family and Preventive Medicine (R.R., K.E.), University of California San Diego School of Medicine, Department of Neurosciences, San Diego, CA; and the Mayo Clinic, Department of Radiology, Phoenix, AZ (J.M.H., A.P.)

Abstract

Background and Purpose— The American Stroke Association guidelines emphasized the need for further high-quality studies that assess agreement by radiologists and nonradiologists engaged in emergency telestroke assessments and decision-making. Therefore, the objective of this study was to determine the level of agreement of baseline brain CT scan interpretations of patients with acute stroke presenting to telestroke spoke hospitals between central reading committee neuroradiologists and each of 2 groups, spoke hospital radiologists and hub hospital vascular neurologists (telestrokologists). Methods— The Stroke Team Remote Evaluation Using a Digital Observation Camera Arizona trial was a prospective, urban single-hub, rural 2-spoke, randomized, blinded, controlled trial of a 2-way, site-independent, audiovisual telemedicine and teleradiology system designed for remote evaluation of adult patients with acute stroke versus telephone consultation to assess eligibility for treatment with intravenous thrombolysis. In the telemedicine arm, the subjects’ CT scans were interpreted by the hub telestrokologist and in the telephone arm by the spoke radiologist. All subjects’ CT scans were subsequently interpreted centrally, independently, and blindly by 2 hub neuroradiologists. The primary CT outcome was determination of a CT-based contraindication to thrombolytic treatment. Kappa statistics and exact agreement rates were used to analyze interobserver agreement. Results— Fifty-four subjects underwent random assignment. The overall agreement for the presence of radiological contraindications to thrombolysis was excellent (0.91) and did not differ substantially between the hub telestrokologist to neuroradiologist and spoke radiologist to neuroradiologist (0.92 and 0.89, respectively). Conclusions— In the context of a telestroke network designed to assess patients with acute stroke syndromes, agreement over the presence or absence of radiological contraindications to thrombolysis was excellent whether the comparisons were between a telestrokologist and neuroradiologist or between spoke radiologist and neuroradiologist. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT00623350.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

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