Abstract

BackgroundA key treatment for acute ischaemic stroke is thrombolysis (rtPA). However, treatment is not devoid of side effects and patients are carefully selected. AVERT (A Very Early Rehabilitation Trial), a large, ongoing international phase III trial, tests whether starting out of bed activity within 24 hours of stroke onset improves outcome. Patients treated with rtPA can be recruited if the physician allows (447 included to date). This study aimed to identify factors that might influence the inclusion of rtPA treated patients in AVERT.MethodsData from all patients thrombolysed at Austin Health, Australia, between September 2007 and December 2011 were retrospectively extracted from medical records. Factors of interest included: demographic and stroke characteristics, 24 hour clinical response to rtPA treatment, cerebral imaging and process factors (day and time of admission).Results211 patients received rtPA at Austin Health and 50 (24%) were recruited to AVERT (AVERT). Of the 161 patients not recruited, 105 (65%) were eligible, and could potentially have been included (pot-AVERT). There were no significant differences in demographics, Oxfordshire classification or stroke severity (NIHSS) on admission between groups. Size and localization of stroke on imaging and symptomatic intracerebral heamorrhage rate did not differ. Patients included in AVERT showed less change in NIHSS 24 hours post rtPA (median change = 1, IQR (−1,4)) than those in the pot-AVERT group (median change = 3, IQR (0,6)) by the median difference of 2 points (95%CI:0.3; p = 0.03). A higher proportion of rtPA treated AVERT patients were admitted on weekdays (p = 0.04).ConclusionExcluding a possible clinical instability, no significant clinical differences were identified between thrombolysed patients included in AVERT and those who were not. Over 500 AVERT patients will be treated with rtPA at trial end. These results suggest we may be able to generalize findings to other rtPA treated patients beyond the trial population.

Highlights

  • A key treatment for acute ischaemic stroke is thrombolysis

  • Prominent among concerns is the fear of secondary symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage, which is one major reason preventing an extension of recombinant-tissue plasminogen activator (rtPA) treatment to a broader spectrum of patients [9,10]

  • Between September 2007 and December 2011, 211 patients were treated with rtPA at Austin Health

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Summary

Introduction

A key treatment for acute ischaemic stroke is thrombolysis (rtPA). Treatment is not devoid of side effects and patients are carefully selected. AVERT (A Very Early Rehabilitation Trial), a large, ongoing international phase III trial, tests whether starting out of bed activity within 24 hours of stroke onset improves outcome. Best practice clinical guidelines recommend two key treatments for acute ischemic stroke: care in a specialized stroke unit and thrombolysis with recombinant-tissue plasminogen activator (rtPA) [2,3]. The most specific and biologically powerful treatment for acute ischemic stroke is thrombolysis with rtPA given within the first 4.5 hours of ischemic stroke onset [5,6]. Thrombolysis is not devoid of side effects and patients are carefully selected [7,8]. Prominent among concerns is the fear of secondary symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (sICH), which is one major reason preventing an extension of rtPA treatment to a broader spectrum of patients [9,10]

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