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Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on a Regional Stroke Thrombectomy Service in the United Kingdom

Joseph Kwan, Madison Brown, Paul Bentley, Zoe Brown, Lucio D’Anna, Charles B. Hall, Omid Halse, Sohaa Jamil, Harri Jenkins, Dheeraj Kalladka, Maneesh C. Patel, Neil Rane, Abhinav Singh, Eleanor Taylor, Marius Venter, Lobotesis, Soma Banerjee

2020Cerebrovascular Diseases21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: We examined the impact of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic on our regional stroke thrombectomy service in the UK. METHODS: This was a single-center health service evaluation. We began testing for COVID-19 on 3 March and introduced a modified "COVID Stroke Thrombectomy Pathway" on 18 March. We analyzed the clinical, procedural and outcome data for 61 consecutive stroke thrombectomy patients between 1 January and 30 April. We compared the data for January and February ("pre-COVID," n = 33) versus March and April ("during COVID," n = 28). RESULTS: Patient demographics were similar between the 2 groups (mean age 71 ± 12.8 years, 39% female). During the COVID-19 pandemic, (a) total stroke admissions fell by 17% but the thrombectomy rate was maintained at 20% of ischemic strokes; (b) successful recanalization rate was maintained at 81%; (c) early neurological outcomes (neurological improvement following thrombectomy and inpatient mortality) were not significantly different; (d) use of general anesthesia fell significantly from 85 to 32% as intended; and (e) time intervals from onset to arrival, groin puncture, and recanalization were not significantly different, whereas internal delays for external referrals significantly improved for door-to-groin puncture (48 [interquartile range (IQR) 39-57] vs. 33 [IQR 27-44] minutes, p = 0.013) and door-to-recanalization (82.5 [IQR 61-110] vs. 60 [IQR 55-70] minutes, p = 0.018). CONCLUSION: The COVID-19 pandemic has had a negative impact on the stroke admission numbers but not stroke thrombectomy rate, successful recanalization rate, or early neurological outcome. Internal delays actually improved during the COVID-19 pandemic. Further studies should examine the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on longer term outcome.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineInterquartile rangeStroke (engine)Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)DemographicsGroinPandemicInternal medicineEmergency medicineSurgeryDemographyDiseaseEngineeringMechanical engineeringSociologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)COVID-19 and healthcare impactsLong-Term Effects of COVID-19Acute Ischemic Stroke Management
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