The Effect of Biological Sex on a County Pre-hospital Stroke Initiative

Author:

Rynor Helen1,Nguyen Kelly2,Oliva Jadthiel3,Nirvanie-Persaud Lisa4,Belnap Starlie C.5ORCID,Rosa Felipe De Los Rios La5

Affiliation:

1. The University of Florida-Jacksonville, Department of Radiology, Jacksonville, Florida, USA

2. The University of South Florida, Department of Neurology, Tampa, Florida, USA

3. Broward Health North, Department of Internal Medicine, Deerfield Beach, Florida, USA

4. Grand Strand Medical Center, Emergency Department, Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, USA

5. Miami Neuroscience Institute of Baptist Health South Florida, South Miami, Florida, USA

Abstract

Background Females are disproportionately affected by strokes when compared to males. This may be attributed to non-traditional stroke symptoms in females and stroke care sex variance. This study explored sex and ethnicity discrepancies in the FAST-ED and stroke outcomes. Methods An internal hospital registry created in 2017 evaluated EMS FAST-ED compliance and monitored patient outcomes. We assessed two cohorts, the 2017 cohort collected one year after FAST-ED implementation, and the 2019 cohort collected two years after FAST-ED implementation. Inclusion criteria included patients aged ≥18 years arriving via EMS as a stroke alert; walk-ins were excluded. EMS FAST-ED compliance, FAST-ED score, final diagnoses, door to needle time (DTN), door to puncture (DTP) time, and stroke treatment volumes were evaluated for sex differences. Results 1,156 cases were analyzed, 638 (55%) were female. EMS FAST-ED compliance decreased by 17%, but did not differ by sex or ethnicity. EMS FAST-ED score was similar for females and males. Despite the similarity in FAST-ED score, females scored higher on the initial NIHSS ( F(1) = 6.25, p < .05) and discharge NIHSS ( F(1) = 8.588, p < .01). Those diagnosed with a stroke were 1.4 times more likely to be female (χ²wald = 6.21, p < .01, 95% CI [1.07–1.80]). Treatment rates did not vary between sex or ethnicity and overall DTN decreased by 10 minutes (2017 cohort M = 36 minutes, SE = 1.96; 2019 cohort M = 26 minutes, SE = 1.69). Conclusions The FAST-ED demonstrated equitable implementation and scoring among a diverse population, regardless of sex or ethnicity. Additionally, patients were equally likely to receive treatment, while benefiting from a decrease in DTN times.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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