Abstract

BackgroundMortality and hospital readmission rates may reflect the quality of acute and postacute stroke care. Our aim was to investigate if, compared with usual care (UC), the COMPASS‐TC (Comprehensive Post‐Acute Stroke Services Transitional Care) intervention (INV) resulted in lower all‐cause and stroke‐specific readmissions and mortality among patients with minor stroke and transient ischemic attack discharged from 40 diverse North Carolina hospitals from 2016 to 2018.Methods and ResultsUsing Medicare fee‐for‐service claims linked with COMPASS cluster‐randomized trial data, we performed intention‐to‐treat analyses for 30‐day, 90‐day, and 1‐year unplanned all‐cause and stroke‐specific readmissions and all‐cause mortality between INV and UC groups, with 90‐day unplanned all‐cause readmissions as the primary outcome. Effect estimates were determined via mixed logistic or Cox proportional hazards regression models adjusted for age, sex, race, stroke severity, stroke diagnosis, and documented history of stroke. The final analysis cohort included 1069 INV and 1193 UC patients (median age 74 years, 80% White, 52% women, 40% with transient ischemic attack) with median length of hospital stay of 2 days. The risk of unplanned all‐cause readmission was similar between INV versus UC at 30 (9.9% versus 8.7%) and 90 days (19.9% versus 18.9%), respectively. No significant differences between randomization groups were seen in 1‐year all‐cause readmissions, stroke‐specific readmissions, or mortality.ConclusionsIn this pragmatic trial of patients with complex minor stroke/transient ischemic attack, there was no difference in the risk of readmission or mortality with COMPASS‐TC relative to UC. Our study could not conclusively determine the reason for the lack of effectiveness of the INV.RegistrationURL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT02588664.

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