Lower hospital arrival systolic blood pressure was associated with better 90-day functional outcome in acute ischemic stroke (adjusted OR 1.07 per 10 mmHg reduction; 95% CI 1.01-1.14; P=0.011).
RCT (n=587)
open blinded outcome-assessed
randomized
Yes
Does intensive pre-hospital BP-lowering improve 90-day functional outcome in acute ischemic stroke patients receiving intravenous thrombolysis?
A modest prehospital SBP reduction of ~20 mmHg is associated with optimal 90-day functional outcomes in acute ischemic stroke patients receiving IV thrombolysis.
Effect estimate: adjusted OR 1.07 per 10 mmHg reduction (95% CI 1.01-1.14)
p-value: p=0.011
Abstract Background and aims Optimal BP management in AIS patients prior to intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) remains uncertain. We determined associations between key SBP control measures and functional outcome in IVT-AIS patients in INTERACT4. Methods INTERACT4 was a multicenter open blinded outcome–assessed randomized trial of intensive BP-lowering (target SBP 130–140 mmHg 30 minutes) in the ambulance versus usual care at 51 hospitals in China. IVT(EVT)-AIS patients were assessed for associations of SBP measures—prehospital (ambulance) reduction magnitude and SBP at hospital arrival—and functional outcome (90-day mRS distribution) using logistic regression and cubic spline models, adjusted for treatment group, baseline SBP, FAST score, age, and sex. SBP trajectory analysis explored patient profiles prone to optimal outcome. Results Of 587 AIS patients (mean age 73 years; 43% female), a J-shaped association was observed for prehospital SBP reduction and functional outcome: optimal at ~ 20 mmHg and greater reductions associated with worse outcome (non-linear P = 0.028). Lower hospital arrival SBP was continuously associated with better functional outcome (adjusted OR 1.07 per 10 mmHg reduction; 95%CI 1.01-1.14; P = 0.011). Trajectory analysis showed patients without active BP intervention, who presented with a spontaneous prehospital ~ 20 mmHg reduction in SBP, had better functional outcome compared with intervention-related trajectories, even with latter achieving similar or lower SBP at hospital arrival (p for trend = 0.027). Conclusions A narrow, modest (~20 mmHg) SBP reduction is associated with favorable outcome prior to IVT for AIS, suggesting that allowing SBP to decrease spontaneously by a similar magnitude might be a reasonable option in these patients. Conflict of interest Xinwen Ren: nothing to disclose.
Ren et al. (Fri,) conducted a rct in Acute Ischemic Stroke (n=587). Intensive BP-lowering in the ambulance vs. Usual care was evaluated on 90-day functional outcome (mRS distribution) (adjusted OR 1.07 per 10 mmHg reduction, 95% CI 1.01-1.14, p=0.011). Lower hospital arrival systolic blood pressure was associated with better 90-day functional outcome in acute ischemic stroke (adjusted OR 1.07 per 10 mmHg reduction; 95% CI 1.01-1.14; P=0.011).
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