Pre-hospital transdermal glyceryl trinitrate in patients with stroke mimics: data from the RIGHT-2 randomised-controlled ambulance trial
Author
Tunnage, BronwynWoodhouse, Lisa J
Dixon, Mark
Anderson, Craig
Ankolekar, Sandeep
Appleton, Jason
Cala, Lesley
England, Timothy
Krishnan, Kailash
Havard, Diane
Mair, Grant
Muir, Keith
Phillips, Steve
Potter, John
Price, Christopher
Randall, Marc
Robinson, Thompson G
Roffe, Christine
Sandset, Else
Siriwardena, Niro
Scutt, Polly
Wardlaw, Joanna M
Sprigg, Nikola
Bath, Philip M
Affiliation
University of Nottingham; Auckland University of Technology; East Midlands Ambulance Service NHS Trust; University of New South Wales; Peking University Health Science Center; Sydney Health Partners; King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust; University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust; University of Western Australia; Royal Derby Hospital Centre; Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust; University of Edinburgh; Queen Elizabeth University Hospital; Dalhousie University; Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre; University of East Anglia; Newcastle University; Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust; University of Leicester; Keele University; Oslo University Hospital; The Norwegian Air Ambulance Foundation; University of Lincoln; NIHR Nottingham Biomedical Research CentrePublication date
2022-01-10
Metadata
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Background: Prehospital stroke trials will inevitably recruit patients with non-stroke conditions, so called stroke mimics. We undertook a pre-specified analysis to determine outcomes in patients with mimics in the second Rapid Intervention with Glyceryl trinitrate in Hypertensive stroke Trial (RIGHT-2). Methods: RIGHT-2 was a prospective, multicentre, paramedic-delivered, ambulance-based, sham-controlled, participant-and outcome-blinded, randomised-controlled trial of transdermal glyceryl trinitrate (GTN) in adults with ultra-acute presumed stroke in the UK. Final diagnosis (intracerebral haemorrhage, ischaemic stroke, transient ischaemic attack, mimic) was determined by the hospital investigator. This pre-specified subgroup analysis assessed the safety and efficacy of transdermal GTN (5 mg daily for 4 days) versus sham patch among stroke mimic patients. The primary outcome was the 7-level modified Rankin Scale (mRS) at 90 days. Results: Among 1149 participants in RIGHT-2, 297 (26%) had a final diagnosis of mimic (GTN 134, sham 163). The mimic group were younger, mean age 67 (SD: 18) vs 75 (SD: 13) years, had a longer interval from symptom onset to randomisation, median 75 [95% CI: 47,126] vs 70 [95% CI:45,108] minutes, less atrial fibrillation and a lower systolic blood pressure and Face-Arm-Speech-Time tool score than the stroke group. The three most common mimic diagnoses were seizure (17%), migraine or primary headache disorder (17%) and functional disorders (14%). At 90 days, the GTN group had a better mRS score as compared to the sham group (adjusted common odds ratio 0.54; 95% confidence intervals 0.34, 0.85; p = 0.008), a difference that persisted at 365 days. There was no difference in the proportion of patients who died in hospital, were discharged to a residential care facility, or suffered a serious adverse event. Conclusions: One-quarter of patients suspected by paramedics to have an ultra-acute stroke were subsequently diagnosed with a non-stroke condition. GTN was associated with unexplained improved functional outcome observed at 90 days and one year, a finding that may represent an undetected baseline imbalance, chance, or real efficacy. GTN was not associated with harm.Citation
Tunnage B, Woodhouse LJ, Dixon M, Anderson C, Ankolekar S, Appleton J, Cala L, England T, Krishnan K, Havard D, Mair G, Muir K, Phillips S, Potter J, Price C, Randall M, Robinson TG, Roffe C, Sandset E, Siriwardena N, Scutt P, Wardlaw JM, Sprigg N, Bath PM; RIGHT-2 Investigators. Pre-hospital transdermal glyceryl trinitrate in patients with stroke mimics: data from the RIGHT-2 randomised-controlled ambulance trial. BMC Emerg Med. 2022 Jan 10;22(1):2. doi: 10.1186/s12873-021-00560-x.Type
ArticleAdditional Links
https://bmcemergmed.biomedcentral.com/PMID
35012462Journal
BMC Emergency MedicinePublisher
BioMed Centralae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1186/s12873-021-00560-x