Drug may improve outcomes in mild stroke patients, save $200 million annually
Treating mild strokes with the clot-busting drug approved for severe stroke could reduce the number of patients left disabled and save $200 million a year in disability costs, according to a study presented at the American Stroke Association's International Stroke Conference 2011. Researchers analyzed hospital records from 437 patients diagnosed with mild ischemic stroke at 16 sites in the Greater Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky region in 2005. The patients arrived at the hospital within the 3.5 hours, well within the 4.5 hour window for treatment with intravenous tissue plasminogen activator (tPA).
The federal government has approved the clot-busting drug for strokes caused by blood clots, known as ischemic stroke, which accounts for 87 percent of all strokes. It's the only acute stroke drug that can reduce disability but remains unproven for treating mild stroke.
"Currently, there is no standard of treatment for patients with the mildest strokes, even if they come into the emergency department quickly enough for intravenous tPA, the only proven treatment for a more serious stroke," said Pooja Khatri, M.D., lead researcher of the study and associate professor in the Department of Neurology and director of acute stroke at the University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center in Ohio.
"The pivotal randomized trials that proved tPA's usefulness excluded mild stroke patients because it was thought that they generally did well and the risk of tPA treatment, which includes a slight but significant risk of life-threatening bleeding in the brain, would not be worth the benefit," she said.
Only four of the mild stroke patients (less than 1 percent) received tPA. The researchers identified 150 of the remaining patients as likely candidates for the drug if the mildness of their stroke was disregarded as a reason to deny them tPA treatment.
Based on the findings, the researchers then excluded those with baseline disability (estimated at 37 percent) and assumed that 8 percent to 13 percent of the remaining mild stroke patients would regain independence after their stroke if tPA was as effective as it was in more serious cases.
Extrapolating to the U.S. population, the researchers said that if tPA proves effective, 2,176 to 3,761 fewer patients would be disabled from mild stroke each year — saving an estimated $200 million in disability expenditures.
In the last five years, researchers conducting several studies have found that about a third of patients who experienced so-called mild strokes remained disabled three months after initial hospitalization.
"It was believed that patients with milder strokes would recover from these events," Khatri said. "These findings raise the question of whether the mildest strokes should be treated with intravenous tPA."
Source: American Heart Association
Articles on the same topic
- University Hospitals system-approach to stroke care increases the use of tPA therapy by 13.5-foldFri, 11 Feb 2011, 15:34:26 UTC
- Many stroke patients not getting preventive therapy for blood clotsFri, 11 Feb 2011, 14:33:04 UTC
- Most stroke patients don't get clot-busting treatment in timely manner, study findsFri, 11 Feb 2011, 14:33:02 UTC
- Most stroke patients not getting clot-busting treatment in timely mannerThu, 10 Feb 2011, 23:32:32 UTC
- More advantages found for new drug: McMaster studyThu, 10 Feb 2011, 17:34:30 UTC
- Final data show experimental agent better than aspirin at preventing strokeThu, 10 Feb 2011, 17:05:41 UTC
- MRI can help decide therapy in patients with unclear-onset strokeThu, 10 Feb 2011, 17:05:40 UTC
- Poorer patients have more severe ischemic strokes, study indicatesWed, 9 Feb 2011, 23:34:04 UTC
- Sharp rise in street drug usage among stroke patients, study showsWed, 9 Feb 2011, 20:34:50 UTC
- Treating mild strokes with clot-busting drug could save $200 million annually, study showsWed, 9 Feb 2011, 16:35:07 UTC
Other sources
- System-approach to stroke care increases the use of tPA therapy by 13.5-foldfrom Science DailyFri, 11 Feb 2011, 18:31:12 UTC
- Many stroke patients not getting preventive therapy for blood clotsfrom PhysorgFri, 11 Feb 2011, 17:31:05 UTC
- University Hospitals system-approach to stroke care increases the use of tPA therapy by 13.5-foldfrom PhysorgFri, 11 Feb 2011, 16:30:26 UTC
- University Hospitals system-approach to stroke care increases the use of tPA therapy by 13.5-foldfrom Science BlogFri, 11 Feb 2011, 16:01:31 UTC
- Most stroke patients not getting clot-busting treatment in timely mannerfrom PhysorgThu, 10 Feb 2011, 23:30:25 UTC
- Final data show experimental agent better than aspirin at preventing strokefrom PhysorgThu, 10 Feb 2011, 18:01:17 UTC
- MRI can help decide therapy in patients with unclear-onset strokefrom PhysorgThu, 10 Feb 2011, 17:30:44 UTC
- More advantages found for new drug: studyfrom PhysorgThu, 10 Feb 2011, 17:30:43 UTC
- Experimental agent better than aspirin at preventing stroke, study suggestsfrom Science DailyThu, 10 Feb 2011, 17:30:21 UTC
- Poorer patients have more severe ischemic strokes, study indicatesfrom Science DailyThu, 10 Feb 2011, 2:31:06 UTC
- Advanced macular degeneration is associated with an increased risk of bleeding stroke, study findsfrom Science DailyThu, 10 Feb 2011, 2:30:58 UTC
- Poorer patients have more severe ischemic strokes, study indicatesfrom PhysorgThu, 10 Feb 2011, 0:00:40 UTC
- Sharp rise in street drug usage among stroke patients, study showsfrom PhysorgWed, 9 Feb 2011, 21:32:45 UTC
- Sharp rise in street drug usage among stroke patients, study showsfrom Science DailyWed, 9 Feb 2011, 21:32:32 UTC
- Drug may improve outcomes in mild stroke patients, save $200 million annuallyfrom PhysorgWed, 9 Feb 2011, 16:31:38 UTC