Prehospital scale to differentiate intracerebral hemorrhage from large-vessel occlusion patients: a prospective cohort study

Evaluating scales to detect large vessel occlusion (LVO) could aid in considering early referrals to a thrombectomy-capable center in the prehospital stroke code setting. Nevertheless, they entail a significant number of false positives, corresponding to intracranial hemorrhages (ICH). Our study aim...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2025-01, Vol.15 (1), p.2905-10, Article 2905
Hauptverfasser: Freixa-Cruz, A., Jimenez-Jimenez, G., Mauri-Capdevila, G., Gallego-Sánchez, Y., García-Díaz, A., Mitjana-Penella, R., Paul-Arias, M., Pereira-Priego, C., Ruiz-Fernández, E., Salvany-Montserrat, S., Sancho-Saldaña, A., San-Pedro-Murillo, E., Saureu, E., Vázquez-Justes, D., Purroy, Francisco
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Evaluating scales to detect large vessel occlusion (LVO) could aid in considering early referrals to a thrombectomy-capable center in the prehospital stroke code setting. Nevertheless, they entail a significant number of false positives, corresponding to intracranial hemorrhages (ICH). Our study aims to identify easily collectible variables for the development of a scale to differentiate patients with ICH from LVO. We conducted a prospective cohort study of stroke code patients between May 2021 and January 2023. Patients were evaluated with CT/CT-Angiography at arrival. We compared clinical variables and vascular risk factors between ICH and LVO patients. Out of 989 stroke code patients, we included 190 (66.7%) LVO cases and 95 (33.3) ICH cases. In the multivariate analysis, headache (odds ratio [OR] 3.56; 1.50–8.43), GCS  160mmHg (OR 6.43; 3.37–12.26) and male sex (OR 2.07; 1.13–3.80) were associated with ICH, while previous hypercholesterolemia (OR 0.35; 0.19–0.65) with LVO. The scale design was conducted, assigning a score to each significant variable based on its specific weight: +2 points for SBP > 160, + 1 points for headache, + 1 points for male sex, + 2 points for GCS 
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-025-86116-6