Improving emergency treatment for patients with acute stroke: the PEARS research programme, including the PASTA cluster RCT

C. Price, P. White, J. Balami, N. Bhattarai, D. Coughlan, C. Exley, D. Flynn, K. Halvorsrud, J. Lally, P. McMeekin, Lisa Shaw, H. Snooks, L. Vale, A. Watkins, G. Ford
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National audit data have shown that treatment provision is suboptimal.\n \n \n \n The aims were to (1) determine the content, clinical effectiveness and day 90 cost-effectiveness of an enhanced paramedic assessment designed to facilitate thrombolysis delivery in hospital and (2) model thrombectomy service configuration options with optimal activity and cost-effectiveness informed by expert and public views.\n \n \n \n A mixed-methods approach was employed between 2014 and 2019. Systematic reviews examined enhanced paramedic roles and thrombectomy effectiveness. Professional and service user groups developed a thrombolysis-focused Paramedic Acute Stroke Treatment Assessment, which was evaluated in a pragmatic multicentre cluster randomised controlled trial and parallel process evaluation. Clinicians, patients, carers and the public were surveyed regarding thrombectomy service configuration. A decision tree was constructed from published data to estimate thrombectomy eligibility of the UK stroke population. A matching discrete-event simulation predicted patient benefits and financial consequences from increasing the number of centres.\n \n \n \n The paramedic assessment trial was hosted by three regional ambulance services (in north-east England, north-west England and Wales) serving 15 hospitals.\n \n \n \n A total of 103 health-care representatives and 20 public representatives assisted in the development of the paramedic assessment. The trial enrolled 1214 stroke patients within 4 hours of symptom onset. Thrombectomy service provision was informed by a Delphi exercise with 64 stroke specialists and neuroradiologists, and surveys of 147 patients and 105 public respondents.\n \n \n \n The paramedic assessment comprised additional pre-hospital information collection, structured hospital handover, practical assistance up to 15 minutes post handover, a pre-departure care checklist and clinician feedback.\n \n \n \n The primary outcome was the proportion of patients receiving thrombolysis. Secondary outcomes included day 90 health (poor status was a modified Rankin Scale score of > 2). Economic outputs reported the number of cases treated and cost-effectiveness using quality-adjusted life-years and Great British pounds.\n \n \n \n National registry data from the Sentinel Stroke National Audit Programme and the Scottish Stroke Care Audit were used.\n \n \n \n Systematic searches of electronic bibliographies were used to identify relevant literature. Study inclusion and data extraction processes were described using Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines.\n \n \n \n The paramedic assessment trial found a clinically important but statistically non-significant reduction in thrombolysis among intervention patients, compared with standard care patients [197/500 (39.4%) vs. 319/714 (44.7%), respectively] (adjusted odds ratio 0.81, 95% confidence interval 0.61 to 1.08; p = 0.15). The rate of poor health outcomes was not significantly different, but was lower in the intervention group than in the standard care group [313/489 (64.0%) vs. 461/690 (66.8%), respectively] (adjusted odds ratio 0.86, 95% confidence interval 0.60 to 1.2; p = 0.39). There was no difference in the quality-adjusted life-years gained between the groups (0.005, 95% confidence interval –0.004 to 0.015), but total costs were significantly lower for patients in the intervention group than for those in the standard care group (–£1086, 95% confidence interval –£2236 to –£13). It has been estimated that, in the UK, 10,140–11,530 patients per year (i.e. 12% of stroke admissions) are eligible for thrombectomy. Meta-analysis of published data confirmed that thrombectomy-treated patients were significantly more likely to be functionally independent than patients receiving standard care (odds ratio 2.39, 95% confidence interval 1.88 to 3.04; n = 1841). Expert consensus and most public survey respondents favoured selective secondary transfer for accessing thrombectomy at regional neuroscience centres. The discrete-event simulation model suggested that six new English centres might generate 190 quality-adjusted life-years (95% confidence interval –6 to 399 quality-adjusted life-years) and a saving of £1,864,000 per year (95% confidence interval –£1,204,000 to £5,017,000 saving per year). The total mean thrombectomy cost up to 72 hours was £12,440, mostly attributable to the consumables. There was no significant cost difference between direct admission and secondary transfer (mean difference –£368, 95% confidence interval –£1016 to £279; p = 0.26).\n \n \n \n Evidence for paramedic assessment fidelity was limited and group allocation could not be masked. Thrombectomy surveys represented respondent views only. Simulation models assumed that populations were consistent with published meta-analyses, included limited parameters reflecting underlying data sets and did not consider the capital costs of setting up new services.\n \n \n \n Paramedic assessment did not increase the proportion of patients receiving thrombolysis, but outcomes were consistent with improved cost-effectiveness at day 90, possibly reflecting better informed treatment decisions and/or adherence to clinical guidelines. However, the health difference was non-significant, small and short term. Approximately 12% of stroke patients are suitable for thrombectomy and widespread provision is likely to generate health and resource gains. Clinician and public views support secondary transfer to access treatment.\n \n \n \n Further evaluation of emergency care pathways will determine whether or not enhanced paramedic assessment improves hospital guideline compliance. Validation of the simulation model post reconfiguration will improve precision and describe wider resource implications.\n \n \n \n This trial is registered as ISRCTN12418919 and the systematic review protocols are registered as PROSPERO CRD42014010785 and PROSPERO CRD42015016649.\n \n \n \n The project was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Programme Grants for Applied Research programme and will be published in full in Programme Grants for Applied Research; Vol. 10, No. 4. 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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Intravenous thrombolysis and intra-arterial thrombectomy are proven emergency treatments for acute ischaemic stroke, but they require rapid delivery to selected patients within specialist services. National audit data have shown that treatment provision is suboptimal. The aims were to (1) determine the content, clinical effectiveness and day 90 cost-effectiveness of an enhanced paramedic assessment designed to facilitate thrombolysis delivery in hospital and (2) model thrombectomy service configuration options with optimal activity and cost-effectiveness informed by expert and public views. A mixed-methods approach was employed between 2014 and 2019. Systematic reviews examined enhanced paramedic roles and thrombectomy effectiveness. Professional and service user groups developed a thrombolysis-focused Paramedic Acute Stroke Treatment Assessment, which was evaluated in a pragmatic multicentre cluster randomised controlled trial and parallel process evaluation. Clinicians, patients, carers and the public were surveyed regarding thrombectomy service configuration. A decision tree was constructed from published data to estimate thrombectomy eligibility of the UK stroke population. A matching discrete-event simulation predicted patient benefits and financial consequences from increasing the number of centres. The paramedic assessment trial was hosted by three regional ambulance services (in north-east England, north-west England and Wales) serving 15 hospitals. A total of 103 health-care representatives and 20 public representatives assisted in the development of the paramedic assessment. The trial enrolled 1214 stroke patients within 4 hours of symptom onset. Thrombectomy service provision was informed by a Delphi exercise with 64 stroke specialists and neuroradiologists, and surveys of 147 patients and 105 public respondents. The paramedic assessment comprised additional pre-hospital information collection, structured hospital handover, practical assistance up to 15 minutes post handover, a pre-departure care checklist and clinician feedback. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients receiving thrombolysis. Secondary outcomes included day 90 health (poor status was a modified Rankin Scale score of > 2). Economic outputs reported the number of cases treated and cost-effectiveness using quality-adjusted life-years and Great British pounds. National registry data from the Sentinel Stroke National Audit Programme and the Scottish Stroke Care Audit were used. Systematic searches of electronic bibliographies were used to identify relevant literature. Study inclusion and data extraction processes were described using Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. The paramedic assessment trial found a clinically important but statistically non-significant reduction in thrombolysis among intervention patients, compared with standard care patients [197/500 (39.4%) vs. 319/714 (44.7%), respectively] (adjusted odds ratio 0.81, 95% confidence interval 0.61 to 1.08; p = 0.15). The rate of poor health outcomes was not significantly different, but was lower in the intervention group than in the standard care group [313/489 (64.0%) vs. 461/690 (66.8%), respectively] (adjusted odds ratio 0.86, 95% confidence interval 0.60 to 1.2; p = 0.39). There was no difference in the quality-adjusted life-years gained between the groups (0.005, 95% confidence interval –0.004 to 0.015), but total costs were significantly lower for patients in the intervention group than for those in the standard care group (–£1086, 95% confidence interval –£2236 to –£13). It has been estimated that, in the UK, 10,140–11,530 patients per year (i.e. 12% of stroke admissions) are eligible for thrombectomy. Meta-analysis of published data confirmed that thrombectomy-treated patients were significantly more likely to be functionally independent than patients receiving standard care (odds ratio 2.39, 95% confidence interval 1.88 to 3.04; n = 1841). Expert consensus and most public survey respondents favoured selective secondary transfer for accessing thrombectomy at regional neuroscience centres. The discrete-event simulation model suggested that six new English centres might generate 190 quality-adjusted life-years (95% confidence interval –6 to 399 quality-adjusted life-years) and a saving of £1,864,000 per year (95% confidence interval –£1,204,000 to £5,017,000 saving per year). The total mean thrombectomy cost up to 72 hours was £12,440, mostly attributable to the consumables. There was no significant cost difference between direct admission and secondary transfer (mean difference –£368, 95% confidence interval –£1016 to £279; p = 0.26). Evidence for paramedic assessment fidelity was limited and group allocation could not be masked. Thrombectomy surveys represented respondent views only. Simulation models assumed that populations were consistent with published meta-analyses, included limited parameters reflecting underlying data sets and did not consider the capital costs of setting up new services. Paramedic assessment did not increase the proportion of patients receiving thrombolysis, but outcomes were consistent with improved cost-effectiveness at day 90, possibly reflecting better informed treatment decisions and/or adherence to clinical guidelines. However, the health difference was non-significant, small and short term. Approximately 12% of stroke patients are suitable for thrombectomy and widespread provision is likely to generate health and resource gains. Clinician and public views support secondary transfer to access treatment. Further evaluation of emergency care pathways will determine whether or not enhanced paramedic assessment improves hospital guideline compliance. Validation of the simulation model post reconfiguration will improve precision and describe wider resource implications. This trial is registered as ISRCTN12418919 and the systematic review protocols are registered as PROSPERO CRD42014010785 and PROSPERO CRD42015016649. The project was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Programme Grants for Applied Research programme and will be published in full in Programme Grants for Applied Research; Vol. 10, No. 4. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
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改善急性卒中患者的急诊治疗:pear研究项目,包括PASTA集群随机对照试验
静脉溶栓和动脉内取栓是经证实的急性缺血性中风的紧急治疗方法,但它们需要在专科服务中快速交付给选定的患者。国家审计数据表明,治疗提供是次优的。目的是(1)确定旨在促进医院溶栓的强化护理人员评估的内容、临床效果和第90天的成本效益;(2)根据专家和公众意见,模拟具有最佳活动和成本效益的取栓服务配置选项。2014年至2019年期间采用了混合方法。系统评价检查了增强的护理人员作用和取栓效果。专业和服务用户群体制定了以溶栓为重点的护理人员急性卒中治疗评估,并通过多中心集群随机对照试验和并行过程评估对其进行了评估。对临床医生、患者、护理人员和公众进行了关于取栓服务配置的调查。根据已发表的数据构建决策树来估计英国卒中人群的血栓切除术资格。一个匹配的离散事件模拟预测了增加中心数量所带来的患者利益和经济后果。护理人员评估试验由三个区域救护车服务机构(英格兰东北部、英格兰西北部和威尔士)主办,服务于15家医院。共有103名保健代表和20名公共代表协助制定了辅助医务人员评估。该试验招募了1214名症状出现后4小时内的中风患者。通过对64名中风专家和神经放射学家的德尔菲(Delphi)调查,以及对147名患者和105名公众受访者的调查,了解了血栓切除术服务的提供情况。护理人员评估包括额外的院前信息收集、结构化的医院交接、交接后15分钟内的实际协助、出院前护理清单和临床医生反馈。主要结局是接受溶栓治疗的患者比例。次要结局包括第90天的健康状况(不良状态为修改后的Rankin量表评分为bb0.2)。经济产出报告了使用质量调整生命年和英镑计算的治疗病例数和成本效益。使用来自Sentinel卒中国家审计项目和苏格兰卒中护理审计的国家注册数据。系统地检索电子书目来识别相关文献。使用系统评价和荟萃分析指南的首选报告项目来描述研究纳入和数据提取过程。护理人员评估试验发现,与标准护理患者相比,干预患者的溶栓率有临床重要但统计学上不显著的降低[分别为197/500(39.4%)对319/714(44.7%)](校正优势比0.81,95%可信区间0.61 ~ 1.08;p = 0.15)。干预组的不良健康结局发生率无显著差异,但低于标准护理组[分别为313/489(64.0%)比461/690(66.8%)](校正优势比0.86,95%可信区间0.60 ~ 1.2;p = 0.39)。两组间获得的质量调整生命年没有差异(0.005,95%可信区间为- 0.004至- 0.015),但干预组患者的总成本明显低于标准治疗组(- 1086英镑,95%可信区间为- 2236英镑至- 13英镑)。据估计,在英国,每年有10,140-11,530例患者(即12%的卒中入院患者)符合血栓切除术的条件。已发表数据的荟萃分析证实,接受血栓切除术的患者功能独立的可能性显著高于接受标准治疗的患者(优势比2.39,95%可信区间1.88 ~ 3.04;n = 1841)。专家共识和大多数公众调查受访者赞成在区域神经科学中心获得血栓切除术的选择性二次转移。离散事件模拟模型表明,六个新的英国中心可能产生190个质量调整生命年(95%置信区间- 6到399个质量调整生命年),每年节省1,864,000英镑(95%置信区间-每年节省1,204,000英镑到5,017,000英镑)。72小时内的平均取栓总费用为12440英镑,主要是耗材。直接入院和二次转院之间没有显著的成本差异(平均差异为368英镑,95%可信区间为1016英镑至279英镑;p = 0.26)。护理人员评估保真度的证据有限,分组分配不能被掩盖。取栓调查仅代表应答者的观点。
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审稿时长
53 weeks
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