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Treatment for Stroke Shows Wide Regional Variations

According to a new study, treatment for stroke varies sharply from region to region – and thousands of people a year may end up unnecessarily disabled as a result.

In the July issue of the journal Stroke, University of Michigan Medical School researchers report the results of a study that for the first time shows wide geographic variation in use of “clotbuster” treatment for stroke.

The investigators found that only 4.2 percent of more than 844,000 stroke victims received the drug called tPA, or another urgent stroke treatment.

If tPA is given in the first hours after a stroke, it can restore blood flow to the brain and prevent damage that causes disability related to stroke.

But when the researchers looked at how tPA was used – or not – in Medicare participants who had strokes in each of the nation’s 3,436 different hospital markets between 2007 and 2010, deep divides emerged, according to a news release from the university. In one-fifth of these regions, no patients receive tPA.

Meanwhile, in places like Stanford, CA and Asheville, NC, as many as 14 percent of stroke patients received tPA through an intravenous line, or a direct-to-brain (intrarterial) treatment that involved tPA or another strategy.

 “These results scream that a major opportunity exists to improve emergency stroke care, if only we can understand how these differences arise and how to eliminate them,” says James Burke, M.D., M.S., the study’s senior author and an assistant professor in neurology at U-M and the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System. “If we had a perfect system in place nationwide, which delivered treatment at the highest rates seen in this study, thousands of patients could be spared disability.”

In the top fifth of facilities examined, an average of 9 percent of patients got clot-busting treatment, while the bottom fifth, no patients received it.

Even after they adjusted for the number of strokes that each region reported during the four years, there was a wide gap in use of emergency stroke treatment. In addition, older patients, women, and members of racial and ethnic minority groups were less likely to receive tPA no matter where they lived.

And while patients were somewhat more likely to get tPA if they had their strokes in regions where hospitals were certified as primary stroke centers, which can deliver tPA around the clock, or where ambulance companies had a policy of driving stroke patients further to get to a stroke center, those factors didn’t make a major difference.

“We can clearly do much better, but existing policy solutions are only going to get us so far,” says Burke. “In our findings, we do see positive results from primary stroke center designation and ambulance bypass, but we are talking about a complex mix of hospital, EMS, and individual response to stroke. We need to understand better what the areas with the highest rates of use are doing differently.”

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