4.6 Article

Geographical Requirements for the Applicability of the Results of the RACECAT Study to Other Stroke Networks

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION
Volume 12, Issue 20, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.123.029965

Keywords

drip-and-ship; mothership; population-based; prehospital stroke triage; reperfusion therapy; stroke networks

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The study aims to determine the population-based applicability of the results of the RACECAT trial to stroke networks with different degrees of clustering of intervention centers. The study found that differences in infrastructure between stroke networks may affect the applicability of the results and suggests that stroke networks should assess population densities and distribution of hospitals before applying prehospital triage algorithms.
BACKGROUND: The RACECAT (Transfer to the Closest Local Stroke Center vs Direct Transfer to Endovascular Stroke Center of Acute Stroke Patients With Suspected Large Vessel Occlusion in the Catalan Territory) trial was the first randomized trial addressing the prehospital triage of acute stroke patients based on the distribution of thrombolysis centers and intervention centers in Catalonia, Spain. The study compared the drip-and-ship with the mothership paradigm in regions where a local thrombolysis center can be reached faster than the nearest intervention center (equipoise region). The present study aims to determine the population-based applicability of the results of the RACECAT study to 4 stroke networks with a different degree of clustering of the intervention centers (clustered, dispersed). METHODS AND RESULTS: Stroke networks were compared with regard to transport time saved for thrombolysis (under the drip-and-ship approach) and transport time saved for endovascular therapy (under the mothership approach). Population-based transport times were modeled with a local instance of an openrouteservice server using open data from OpenStreetMap. The fraction of the population in the equipoise region differed substantially between clustered networks (Catalonia, 63.4%; France North, 87.7%) and dispersed networks (Southwest Bavaria, 40.1%; Switzerland, 40.0%). Transport time savings for thrombolysis under the drip-and-ship approach were more marked in clustered networks (Catalonia, 29 minutes; France North, 27 minutes) than in dispersed networks (Southwest Bavaria and Switzerland, both 18 minutes). CONCLUSIONS: Infrastructure differences between stroke networks may hamper the applicability of the results of the RACECAT study to other stroke networks with a different distribution of intervention centers. Stroke networks should assess the population densities and hospital type/distribution in the temporal domain before applying prehospital triage algorithms to their specific setting.

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