
Geographic Analysis of Mobile Stroke Unit Treatment in a Dense Urban Area: The New York City METRONOME Registry
Author(s) -
Kummer Benjamin R.,
Lerario Mackenzie P.,
Hunter Madeleine D.,
Wu Xian,
Efraim Elizabeth S.,
Salehi Omran Setareh,
Chen Monica L.,
Diaz Ivan L.,
Sacchetti Daniel,
Lekic Tim,
Kulick Erin R.,
Pishanidar Sammy,
Mir Saad A.,
Zhang Yi,
Asaeda Glenn,
Navi Babak B.,
Marshall Randolph S.,
Fink Matthew E.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of the american heart association
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.494
H-Index - 85
ISSN - 2047-9980
DOI - 10.1161/jaha.119.013529
Subject(s) - medicine , thrombolysis , stroke (engine) , emergency medicine , metropolitan area , metronome , population , medical emergency , myocardial infarction , environmental health , mechanical engineering , pathology , rhythm , engineering
Background Mobile stroke units ( MSU s) reduce time to intravenous thrombolysis in acute ischemic stroke. Whether this advantage exists in densely populated urban areas with many proximate hospitals is unclear. Methods and Results We evaluated patients from the METRONOME (Metropolitan New York Mobile Stroke) registry with suspected acute ischemic stroke who were transported by a bi‐institutional MSU operating in Manhattan, New York, from October 2016 to September 2017. The comparison group included patients transported to our hospitals via conventional ambulance for acute ischemic stroke during the same hours of MSU operation (Monday to Friday, 9 am to 5 pm) . Our exposure was MSU care, and our primary outcome was dispatch‐to‐thrombolysis time. We estimated mean differences in the primary outcome between both groups, adjusting for clinical, demographic, and geographic factors, including numbers of nearby designated stroke centers and population density. We identified 66 patients treated or transported by MSU and 19 patients transported by conventional ambulance. Patients receiving MSU care had significantly shorter dispatch‐to‐thrombolysis time than patients receiving conventional care (mean: 61.2 versus 91.6 minutes; P =0.001). Compared with patients receiving conventional care, patients receiving MSU care were significantly more likely to be picked up closer to a higher mean number of designated stroke centers in a 2.0‐mile radius (4.8 versus 2.7, P =0.002). In multivariable analysis, MSU care was associated with a mean decrease in dispatch‐to‐thrombolysis time of 29.7 minutes (95% CI , 6.9–52.5) compared with conventional care. Conclusions In a densely populated urban area with a high number of intermediary stroke centers, MSU care was associated with substantially quicker time to thrombolysis compared with conventional ambulance care.