Abstract

Background: Medical care disparities are wide, and stroke in no exception. Reperfusion therapy is the standard treatment for acute ischemic stroke, but its use may vary across hospitals. Methods: Data from 75,870 patients admitted to 247 acute stroke hospitals nationwide were obtained through the 2013-2018 acute stroke quality evaluation program conducted by the Health Insurance Review and Assessment Service. The primary outcome was the hospital reperfusion therapy rate (RTR), defined as the proportion of intravenous tissue plasminogen activator (IVT) and/or endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) cases in patients potentially eligible for reperfusion therapy (onset-to-arrival time ≤ 6 hours and initial NIHSS score ≥ 4). Hospital RTRs, adjusted for age, sex, onset-to-arrival time, and initial stroke severity, were analyzed with hospital characteristics. Results: During the study period, 10,513 stroke patients were potentially eligible for reperfusion treatment and were admitted to 247 acute care hospitals. The RTR of the study population was 52.9%. The mean hospital RTR was 34.8% [median (IQR) 37.5% (9.8 - 56.2)]. A higher number of beds and average monthly stroke admissions were associated with a higher hospital RTR. Multivariable analysis revealed the average stroke admission per month, presence of stroke unit, the average IVT per month, and the average EVT per month were the independent determinants for hospital RTR. Hospital RTR was inversely correlated with 1-year mortality regardless of hospital stroke volume. Conclusions: RTRs vary widely across hospitals. The higher the hospital stroke volume, the higher the hospital RTRs. High hospital RTRs correlates with low 1-year mortality regardless of hospital stroke volume.

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