DOI: 10.12809/hkmj187413
© Hong Kong Academy of Medicine. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
An integrated stroke system in Hong Kong
Kevin KC Hung, FHKCEM, FHKAM (Emergency
Medicine); Colin A Graham, MD, FHKCEM
Accident and Emergency Medicine Academic Unit, The
Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, Hong Kong
Corresponding author: Prof Colin A Graham (cagraham@cuhk.edu.hk)
To the Editor—There have been repeated calls
to establish a coordinated acute stroke system in Hong Kong.1 2 Overseas
experience demonstrates that intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) can be
reliably administered at a mean of 52 minutes from alerting prehospital
services.3 This study from Berlin3 utilising ambulances equipped with
computed tomography scanners (among other system changes in care delivery)
may have little resemblance to the current situation in Hong Kong.
Nonetheless it shows what is possible with appropriate vision,
determination, and resources.
Similar to other time critical interventions, the
speed and coverage of IVT in the stroke system must be balanced with the
potential risks and harm for our patients. An integrated system will lead
to stroke mimics (SM)—patients who present with nonvascular neurological
conditions that closely resemble stroke—presenting in greater numbers to
the emergency department. These patients are often ignored in the planning
of acute stroke services as they have far more impact on emergency
physicians than stroke physicians. Therefore, the impact of establishing
an acute stroke system on emergency departments must be factored into the
planning of these services at the outset.
We concur with Leung1
and the findings of a recent meta-analysis that systems change
interventions can increase the proportion of eligible stroke patients
receiving IVT.4 An integrated
approach between prehospital providers, emergency department staff, and
stroke physicians will improve outcomes. The establishment of stroke
centres with clear protocols for primary diversion will require
coordinated multidisciplinary input, and with careful consideration given
to the resources required for the triage, transport, investigation, and
ongoing care of SM patients who will inevitably be diverted to stroke
centres inadvertently.
Declaration
All authors have no conflicts of interest to
disclose.
References
1. Leung GK. We need a stroke system. Hong
Kong Med J 2018;24:9-10. Crossref
2. Graham CA. Rational emergency stroke
care in Hong Kong. Hong Kong Med J 2012;18:262-3.
3. Ebinger M, Winter B, Wendt M, et al.
Effect of the use of ambulance-based thrombolysis on time to thrombolysis
in acute ischemic stroke: a randomized clinical trial. JAMA
2014;311:1622-31. Crossref
4. Paul CL, Ryan A, Rose S, et al. How can
we improve stroke thrombolysis rates? A review of health system factors
and approaches associated with thrombolysis administration rates in acute
stroke care. Implementation Sci 2016;11:51. Crossref