Abstract

Introduction: The Southeastern United States, known as the “the stroke belt,” has the highest stroke mortality rate in the country. One possible reason is the high proportion of its residents living in rural areas. Studies suggest stroke care is worse for patients living in rural areas, and they are less likely to receive acute stroke therapy (intravenous thrombolysis or endovascular therapy), leading to worse outcomes. We compared 90-day modified Rankin Score (mRS) between patients living in urban versus rural areas who received acute stroke therapy. Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis of a tertiary care academic hospital in the Southeastern US, the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Patients admitted with imaging-confirmed ischemic stroke and had acute stroke therapy between 2014 and 2018 were included for analysis. Individuals were classified as rural or urban dwelling based on US Department of Agriculture’s 2010 Rural-Urban Commuting Area Codes. Clinical and demographic characteristics were collected from the chart. Stepwise logistic regression models were performed with these variables to compare good (mRS 0-1) vs poor (mRS 2-6) functional outcomes. Results: There were 232 patients included in the study (185 urban, and 47 rural). There were no significant differences between groups in age (urban 64.5±15.1; rural 66.2±14.7), gender (urban: 56% male 44% female, rural: 51% male 49% female), or proportion of African-Americans (33% of urban group and 25% of rural group). Mean baseline NIH stroke scale was higher in rural patients than urban (17.0 vs 14.8 respectively, p-value=0.03.). In logistical regression models for good functional outcome (mRS 0-1) at 90-days, analysis of factors including rural/urban status, gender, age, insurance, transfer, and acute stroke therapy, revealed only older age as a significant factor (OR 0.97, 95% CI 0.95-0.99). Conclusions: Our study demonstrated no significant differences in functional outcome between patients from urban and rural locations after receiving acute therapy for treating ischemic stroke. Importantly, only older age predicted poor functional outcome at 90 days. Our study demonstrates that patients from rural areas can recover similarly to those from urban areas.

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