Abstract

Introduction: For patients diagnosed with central retinal artery occlusion (CRAO), timely screening for underlying risk factors to prevent secondary stroke and other cardiovascular events is required. Given the profound impact on vision, there is also great interest in the potential to treat CRAO. Thrombolytic therapy is the current standard of care in acute ischemic cerebral stroke, but the window for administration is short. As part of a larger pilot to investigate the prospect of intravenous thrombolysis for patients presenting with acute CRAO in our institution, we set out to evaluate the specific presentation patterns of this population within our system. Methods: Retrospective study performed on 804 patients correctly diagnosed with CRAO from 2011-2020. From this cohort of patients, we identified 484 for whom we could accurately determine the time of first symptoms, the time of first contact with the healthcare system, and the time of evaluation by an ophthalmologist. Results: While 18.0% (87/484) of patients waited over 24 hours from time of vision loss to contact the health care system, 50.2% of patients did connect in under 4.5 hours (243/484). However, only 16.7% (81/484) of patients saw an ophthalmologist within that window, and 35.5% (172/484) did not have any ophthalmologic evaluation within 24 hours of vision loss. Conclusion: Half of CRAO patients within our institution connect with the health care system within a potential window for intravenous thrombolytic treatment, but the majority do not receive ophthalmic diagnosis within that time frame. In conclusion, public health education efforts to speed up presentation times and system-based strategies to decrease the time to ophthalmic diagnosis are needed if thrombolytic treatment either via compassionate use or within a clinical trial setting is to be more widely offered.

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