Professor Thanh Phan |
Mortality is an important metric for measuring hospital
performance in treating patients with a disease. The usual method of estimating mortality in
hospitals is to produce a standardised measure, adjusted for various patient
health comorbidities. While this approach is widely used by groups such as Dr
Foster Intelligence and Centres for Medicare and Medicaid Services,
this approach is insufficient for stroke.
Published recently in the Journal of Stroke and
Cerebrovascular Disease, researchers in the Stroke and Ageing
Research Group at Monash University have revealed the optimal time for
measuring stroke severity and the minimum clinical dataset for reliably
predicting stroke mortality.
“Of particular significance, the predictors change depending
on the time point for measuring mortality,” said study lead author Adjunct
Clinical Professor Thanh Phan.
“Our analysis clearly shows that the measure of stroke
severity, when incorporated into the model, substantially improves the accuracy
of estimated stroke mortality over and above adjustment for comorbidities.”
Professor Thanh said this makes intuitive sense because a
person with no comorbidities can have a major stroke and vice-versa.
“And post-stroke complications and mortality are also
greater in patients with severe stroke.”
The research team also found that the measure of stroke
severity used for predicting or estimating mortality is best obtained at 24
hours after stroke.
“24 hours is the critical time when neurological deficits
have stabilised, and some patients who appear to have mild strokes at onset can
progress to be more severe over 24 to 48 hours,” said Professor Thanh.
“Using stroke severity in addition to time-appropriate
covariates such as age, gender, and comorbidity will enable more valid
comparisons of hospital performance,” said Professor Velandai Srikanth,
co-author and Head of the Stroke and Ageing Research Group.
“These results have the capacity to influence how hospital
mortality is accurately estimated in patients with stroke.”
An acute stroke specialist and neurologist with clinical and
research expertise in stroke thrombolysis, endovascular therapy and the
management of transient ischaemic attack (TIA), Professor Phan is former Head
of Stroke at Monash Health.
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