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Treatment of Stroke in Canadian Emergency Departments: Time to be Leaders

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2016

Devin R. Harris*
Affiliation:
Department of Emergency Medicine, Kelowna General Hospital, Kelowna, BC Department of Emergency Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC
Eddy S. Lang
Affiliation:
Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB
Jeffery J. Perry
Affiliation:
University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON
Laurie J. Morrison
Affiliation:
University of Toronto, Toronto, ON.
*
Correspondence to: Dr. Devin Harris, Head, Department of Emergency Medicine, Kelowna General Hospital, 2268 Pandosy Avenue, Kelowna, BC, V1Y1T2; Email: [email protected]

Abstract

Type
Editorial
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians 2016 

Editorial

The debate on effectiveness of thrombolysis in acute ischemic stroke has divided the emergency medicine community since the publication of the NINDS trial in 1995. 1 This trial was the first to show the effectiveness of treating acute stroke with intravenous alteplase, providing the first therapy that could be administered in emergency departments (EDs) to treat ischemic stroke. However, the merits of this trial, and the risks and benefits of alteplase in stroke, have been hotly debated in the emergency medicine community for the last twenty years. Community-based studies showed that the therapy caused harm, re-analysis of the trial data wasn’t as conclusive, and opinion leaders within the emergency medicine community advocated against its widespread adoption.Reference Katzan, Furlan and Lloyd 2 - Reference Newman 4 The Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians (CAEP) Position Statement on Thrombolysis for Acute Ischemic Stroke reflected this sentiment in 2000, suggesting alteplase use be limited to research settings. 5 Since then, many within the emergency medicine community have been passionately against the use of thrombolysis in acute ischemic stroke. This vehement passion against thrombolysis is reflected in what we believe is a biased editorial published in CJEM in April 2015.Reference Johnstone 6

This debate regarding the effectiveness of thrombolysis for acute ischemic stroke has resulted in collateral damage. This contrarian viewpoint, although rooted in the best interests of patient safety—that we don’t offer a therapy that has significant and lethal side effects—has hindered progress in stroke care within EDs and has limited leadership, collaboration, and engagement. In many instances, the emergency medicine community has been excluded or has not participated in stroke improvement initiatives, stroke research, or collaboration with stroke specialists, and as a result has most likely affected patient care. There has been a perceived belief amongst emergency physicians that there are limited therapies that may reduce death and disability from acute stroke (an obvious generalization); we have became stroke nihilists. This has extended to the relative passivity with which transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) have been treated within EDs in the past; if this were chest pain, we’d act with urgency, and with a lot more intensity.

In 2016, this is not acceptable. Stroke is preventable, acute stroke is treatable—and emergency physicians should be leaders in this paradigm shift.

Since the NINDS trial was published twenty-one years ago, as mentioned in the CAEP editorial, there have been more trials published investigating intravenous thrombolysis for acute ischemic stroke. Certainly, the trials have been plagued by varying patient populations, varying outcome measures, and in the case of IST-3, poor trial design and reporting.Reference Hacke, Kaste and Bluhmki 7 , Reference Sandercock and Wardlaw 8 It has been confusing for us to compare trials, derive conclusions, and make sense of the conflicting evidence due to the heterogeneity in trial design. However, the CAEP Stroke Committee thoroughly reviewed the literature and published clinical practice guidelines, leading to the current CAEP position statement published in March 2015, strongly supporting the use of thrombolysis for acute ischemic stroke under three hours, due to favourable risk-benefit considerations.Reference Harris, Hall and Lobay 9

In 2015, the thrombolysis landscape shifted further. Since January 2015, five high-quality randomized clinical trials have been published, showing the effectiveness of catheterization and clot removal in acute stroke.Reference Goyal, Demchuk and Menon 10 - Reference Jovin, Chamorro and Cobo 14 These procedures, using stent-retriever devices, were compared against an active placebo—intravenous thrombolysis. And one of the trials, a Canadian trial, was the first acute interventional stroke trial to show a mortality benefit.Reference Goyal, Demchuk and Menon 10 Along with reinforcing that time is the most important determinant for success, the defining characteristic of these trials is how patients were selected for inclusion or intervention. Rather than the crude assessment of eligibility for intravenous thrombolysis that we have been applying—which is time since onset and a non-contrast computed tomography (CT) head—these trials used advanced imaging (predominantly CT angiography) for enrolment and eligibility. It is proven now that advanced imaging to determine clot size and location, core (infarct) size, and collateral circulation are much better criteria for selection of patients for thrombolysis.Reference Furlan 15 We have moved from solely time-based criteria for eligibility to tissue-based and time-based criteria.

These trials will and should have a significant impact on emergency practice. Firstly, emergency medical services (EMS) leaders have to be engaged in the discussions relating to patient transport to specialized stroke centers. Bypass, direct transport, and repatriation decisions for stroke patients affect ambulance availability and response times for other calls. Secondly, the imperative of time in treating stroke patients has been reinforced; we need to have streamlined pre-notification, triage, imaging, and referral mechanisms with our departments. Thirdly, we need to be leaders in centers that don’t have direct access to stroke teams. We need to identify and treat stroke and TIA patients, or rapidly arrange transfer. This requires clinical skill, experience, and education, and currently our residency programs are not providing enough training in stroke.Reference Harris, Teal and Turton 16

Thrombolysis has monopolized the discussion regarding acute stroke care within EDs, but much more can be done for stroke patients—simple and safe interventions—that we should be, but are not, doing consistently. We should give aspirin to all stroke patients who don’t have a contraindication.Reference Sandercock, Counsell and Tseng 17 All our eligible stroke patients should be admitted to stroke units; this unequivocally has the largest impact on morbidity and mortality. 18 Additionally, we can institute very simple therapies in the ED that make a significant difference: don’t insert a urinary catheter, check and treat for hyperthermia, manage patient’s glucose levels, perform swallowing screens, and provide prophylaxis for deep vein thrombosis (DVT).Reference Lindsay, Bayley and Hellings 19 These are simple interventions that, on a population-based level, have a larger impact than thrombolysis.Reference Langhorne, de Villiers and Pandian 20

More importantly, we can prevent stroke. The management of TIAs is now a time-sensitive emergency medicine disorder, to be diagnosed and managed by us. Accurate diagnosis, and application of proven therapies, such as anticoagulation for atrial fibrillation, rapid referral for carotid endarterectomy for symptomatic carotid stenosis, and administration of anti-platelet medications, can reduce the risk of stroke after TIA by up to 80%.Reference Rothwell, Giles and Chandratheva 21 Current Canadian guidelines advocate that all patients who experience a TIA with symptoms under 48 hours should be seen in an ED immediately;Reference Coutts, Wein and Lindsay 22 experts recognize that access to urgent imaging is an imperative, shifting TIA management from an outpatient setting to the ED.Reference Kamal, Hill and Blacquiere 23 This is unstable angina of the brain; it should be managed with the same urgency as suspected and confirmed acute coronary syndromes.

In the past, we were correct in being cautious to offer thrombolysis for all patients with acute ischemic stroke, because it was harmful if given to the wrong patient. However, we have held onto historical beliefs regarding the ineffectiveness of thrombolysis in stroke, despite increasing evidence supporting its effectiveness. Regardless of our reluctance to embrace acute stroke treatment and secondary prevention as an ED responsibility, stroke mortality has been steadily and significantly declining in Canada.Reference Kamal, Lindsay and Cote 24 Currently, there are plenty of opportunities for emergency physicians to improve stroke and TIA care: by taking roles as stroke champions in stroke centers, by improving the quality and depth of stroke education we deliver our residents, or by participating in or leading stroke programs of research. Our involvement could only reduce the burden of stroke on Canadians further.

In 2016, it is time for us to move beyond the thrombolysis debate, and become engaged. It is time for us to be leaders.

Competing Interests: DRH consults for Bayer and Pfizer. The other authors declare no competing interests.

References

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