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Stroke Telemedicine for Arizona Rural Residents Trial

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Cerebrovascular Disorders
Brain Ischemia
Brain Infarction
Stroke
Brain Diseases
Cerebral Infarction
Vascular Diseases
Interventions
Other: Telemedicine
Registration Number
NCT00829361
Lead Sponsor
Mayo Clinic
Brief Summary

The STARR network registry consists of a 4 spoke 1 hub system. Which will consist of prospective collection, recording, and regular analysis of telestroke patient consultation and care data for the purpose of quality measure assessment and improvement and benchmarking against other national and international telestroke programs.

Detailed Description

Background:

Acute stroke resources and care are deficient in Arizona's rural communities. Stroke telemedicine is a proven modality for overcoming the deficiency. Stroke telemedicine allows a telephonic consultation and/or two-way audio video consultation between a stroke neurologist and a stroke patient at a remotely located emergency department. University of California San Diego Stroke Center has completed an NIH funded randomized controlled trial, STRokE DOC, comparing telephonic consultations to video consultations. In that trial, video telemedicine consultations resulted in more accurate decision making compared with telephone consultations. The video telemedicine consultative modality provides the rural stroke patient with the opportunity to receive expert stroke care, interpretation of neuroimaging, determination of appropriate acute therapy, and recommendations regarding need for transfer to a higher level of care. Mayo Clinic Arizona is currently completing a state funded feasibility trial, STRokE DOC Arizona (06-005731), as a preliminary step toward establishing a state wide stroke telemedicine network, STARR. The STARR network plan should include the prospective collection, recording, and regular analysis of telestroke patient consultation data for the purpose of quality measure assessment and improvement.

Objective:

The objective of this research is to establish a system for the prospective collection, recording, and regular analysis of telestroke patient consultation and care data for the purpose of quality measure assessment and improvement and benchmarking against other national and international telestroke programs.

Methods:

The STARR network consists of a primary stroke center hub (Mayo Clinic Hospital) that serves multiple spoke hospitals in remote and rural regions of the state (e.g. Kingman and Yuma Regional Medical Centers, La Paz Regional Hospital and Copper Queen Community Hospital). Mayo Clinic vascular neurologists, who have licenses and privileges to practice teleneurology at spoke hospitals in the state, participate in a 24/7 Mayo Clinic telestroke hotline. When an acute stroke patient presents to a STARR network participating spoke hospital emergency department, a stroke alert is activated and the hotline is phoned. An on-call vascular neurologist receives the pager notification and communicates with the referring emergency physician. The telestroke consultation will begin by telephone and will be supplemented by audio-video telemedicine communication and teleradiology. The patient is registered at Mayo Clinic and a registration number is generated by the house supervisor. Emergency neurology care is rendered. Every participating spoke hospital emergency physician is already a sub-investigator in telestroke research and has completed HSRP training and certification. The Mayo Clinic IRB has served as the central IRB of record for state funded Mayo Clinic telestroke research. The patient or legal designate will be approached by either the spoke emergency physician investigator and/or the hub neurologist investigator (via telemedicine camera) for consent to proceed with telestroke consultation, and to acquire, store, and analyze data concerning the acute stroke care and outcome of the patient. Data sources will include the Mayo Clinic electronic transcribed telestroke consultation note, the emergency department nursing and physician records, the admission consultation and diagnostic tests records, hospital discharge note, and the content of a brief 90 day follow-up phone call by the research coordinator to patient and/or family member. The licensed neurologists already have authorization to access patient spoke hospital records as part of their clinical privileges, but the designated Mayo Clinic research coordinator will have the responsibility to extract data from the sources and enter it into the registry. The STARR registry data elements will be exactly the same as the established and familiar data elements for the STRokE DOC Arizona trial, for the purposes of continuity. Mayo Clinic Arizona research biostatistics group will develop the electronic data manager and conduct and report analyses monthly to the telestroke research group.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
447
Inclusion Criteria
  • Patients presenting to Rural Emergency Department within 12 hours of acute stroke symptom onset.
  • Written informed consent.
Read More
Exclusion Criteria
  • Unlikely to complete study through 90-day follow-up.
Read More

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
TelemedicineTelemedicine-
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
To assess the numbers of patients who receive thrombolytics and the time to treatment in patients evaluated by telemedicine90 days
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
To assess the functional outcomes of acute stroke subjects by Barthel index and Modified Rankin Scale90 days
To assess the rate of intracranial hemorrhage post thrombolysis90 days

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Mayo Clinic Hospital

🇺🇸

Phoenix, Arizona, United States

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