Wake Up and Smell the tPA

What happens when you wake up and you’re paralyzed from a stroke? Well, usually nothing. “Unknown time of onset” takes you – for better or worse – out of the game for alteplase, but not necessarily for endovascular therapy should a large-vessel occlusion be identified. Those large vessel occlusions, in the setting of a favorable CT perfusion profile, seem to benefit from endovascular therapy.

But, getting back to the “wake up stroke” – these have had our neurologists gnashing their teeth for some time. They have hypothesized many of these strokes have occurred just before waking and might otherwise be eligible for treatment. Absent reliable presenting information regarding the time of onset, these authors look to MRI – using presence of DWI lesion without corresponding FLAIR signal as a surrogate for tissue viability/stroke recency. Exclusion criteria in addition to the usual alteplase culprits were extremes of age, premorbid functional disability, NIHSS >25, thrombectomy candidates, and those with infarct volumes greater than 1/3rd the MCA territory. The primary outcome was 0 or 1 on the mRS at 90 days, like most trials.

These authors in this multicenter, placebo-controlled planned to enroll 800 patients, but ran out of money after five years and 503 patients. To get to these 503, the authors needed to screen 1362 potential strokes. These 859 exclusions were for various reasons, but over half were because the FLAIR matched the DWI lesion – indicated a completed infarct. Another 137 had negative DWI – i.e., not stroke – and various others had hemorrhage, failed to meet criteria for infarct size, or a scattering of other exclusions. Even despite these exclusions, another 79 snuck through as protocol violations, including 48 who should have been excluded based on imaging criteria.

Now, the meat: About 95% of those included were of the “wake up” variety, nearly all from overnight sleep. Baseline clinical features were generally well-matched. Median NIHSS was 6 in each group, although median lesion volume on DWI was 2.0 mL in the alteplase cohort as compared to 2.5 with placebo. At 90 days, 53.3% of the alteplase cohort achieved an mRS of 0-1 as compared with 41.8% with placebo. Bleeding complications, as typical, favored the placebo cohort – with absolute advantages ranging from 1.6% to 3.6%, depending on the definition of hemorrhage used. Death at 90 days also favored placebo at 1.2% versus 4.1%.

It is difficult to know what to do with these data unless your system is specifically equipped to replicate the conditions of this trial with rapid MRI. Even then, there are some oddities and specific warnings to unpack. If adhering to this protocol, the majority of patients screened will not be eligible for treatment. The number of patients who had completed their infarction was similar to those who had DWI/FLAIR mismatch, and another third had other imaging or clinical findings excluding them from treatment. Incorporating MRI into workflow may not yet represent a high-value approach.

Then, the authors performed a pre-specified subgroup analysis stratifying based on NIHSS – and the 109 analyzed patients with a NIHSS >10 did terrible. Only 13.5% of those in the tPA cohort and 12.3% of those receiving placebo achieved mRS 0 or 1. Unpacking these stratifications further, the authors provide us a whole host of breakdowns:

Generally, not too much should be read into these secondary outcomes, but they are useful for generating equipoise for other investigations.  That said, these data should be at least a useful cautionary tale regarding the value of tPA in the setting of mild, but disabling stroke – as these 175 patients represent at least six times more patients than from NINDS, and are of higher quality evidence than any of the Get With the Guidelines publications trying to build the case for tPA in mild stroke.

One takeaway that should definitely not be generated from this is: “well, if there’s an absolute increase in good outcome of 12% on those screened with MRI, then treating all ‘wake up’ patients after screening with just CT could generate about a 6% absolute benefit, and that should be offered to patients.”  Unfortunately, I suspect we will hear such calls – probably based on parsing out the low NIHSS patients in the subgroups above, and trying to toss out the ~30% with a large-vessel occlusion identified on MRA as patients who should be triaged to endovascular.  Again, trying to pick and choose the secondary outcomes that suit your narrative is fraught with peril, and the fact remains such a treatment strategy is also likely to generate harms greater than those seen in this trial.  These data ought to have a very narrow application – but shareholders and executives don’t realized dividends when alteplase isn’t flying off the shelves for expanded indications.

“MRI-Guided Thrombolysis for Stroke with Unknown Time of Onset”
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1804355

Snacking Before Bedtime

How long before a procedural sedation is fasting required? You know, of course, the American Society of Anesthesiologists guidelines specify: a mini- mum fasting period of 2 hours for clear liquids, 4 hours for breast milk, 6 hours for infant formula and light meals, and 8 hours for solids containing meat or fatty foods.

Of course, anecdotally – if anecdotally means hundreds of thousands of safe sedations – Emergency Physicians have known these restrictions are nonsense.

But, guidelines are best written off published evidence – so, we have a pre-planned analysis of the relationship between fasting time and vomiting from a Canadian cohort study of pediatric sedation. With 6,295 sedations included in their analysis, almost half of whom did not meet solids fasting guidelines, these authors found no relationship between fasting time and vomiting. There were, even, only six instances of intra-procedure vomiting, and fasting duration ranged from 1.7 hours to 17.5 hours – but they all received ketamine. None of the intra-procedure, or ~300 peri-procedural episodes of vomiting, resulted in pulmonary aspiration. No relationship was found between fasting time and any other type of adverse event, either.

So, another useful piece of literature to wave around in committee meetings – both to eliminate any fasting restrictions, and, again, to help demonstrate the safety of EP-performed procedural sedation.

“Association of Preprocedural Fasting With Outcomes of Emergency Department Sedation in Children”
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapediatrics/article-abstract/2680050

The Futility of Alteplase

This article is mostly a story about tenecteplase, but, effectively, it’s also a scathing indictment of alteplase – you know, the miraculous “clot-buster” we’ve been using for the past 23 years.

Because, despite rumors to the contrary, it doesn’t actually bust clots.

This isn’t news to anyone who actually follows the stroke literature closely. Indeed, the entire endovascular/thrombectomy industry is constructed upon this edifice of failure. And, as we see in this 202-patient study comparing recanalization rates after large-vessel occlusion, tenecteplase appears to be more efficacious than alteplase – 22% vs. 10%.

That is to say, in a population of 24 ICA occlusions, 3 basilar occlusions, 60 M1 occlusions, and 14 M2 occlusions, alteplase successfully “busted the clot” in 10. Most of the difference in recanalization was driven by the M1 and M2 patients, where tenecteplase had a 26% success rate and alteplase languished at 8%. These rates for alteplase are a little lower than most prior literature, so it is reasonable to be suspicious of the superiority margin associated with tenecteplase.

But, regardless, as you can see, both are dismal – and, for the past 20+ years, prior to the advent of even limited endovascular availability, we’ve just been pushing alteplase on these large vessels to no beneficial effect – except to Genentech and their shareholders.

“Tenecteplase versus Alteplase before Thrombectomy
for Ischemic Stroke”
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1716405

Slow Ketamine is Less Bad than Fast Ketamine

In today’s report of study findings that ought not surprise anyone – slow infusion of ketamine is less bothersome than IV push dosing.

This is a quite small study, randomizing just 62 patients to 0.3mg/kg of ketamine by either IVP over 1 minute, or dilution into 100mL of saline and infused over 15 minutes. Of the 59 completing the study, nearly all patients experience some side effect – 86% of the IVP arm and 70% of those receiving infusion. When qualified by “moderate or greater” side effects, the difference was magnified to be 76% vs. 43%, mostly driven by feelings of unreality or hallucinations. The study was underpowered to detect differences in pain scores, but no underlying difference is suggested by these data.

Ketamine has become increasingly popular for pain control as of late, and these findings help support practice in terms of improving tolerability.

“Slow infusion of low-dose ketamine reduces bothersome side effects compared to IV push: a double-blind, double dummy, randomized controlled trial”
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29645317

Wake Up And Smell the Isopropyl

Why? It’s just as good or better than the sweet, sweet taste of ondansetron dissolving under your tongue.

This is a rather small, but quite interesting trial, building upon prior work evaluating the use of inhaled isopropyl alcohol for nausea. It’s better than saline placebo, yes, but what about those actual doctor-type medicines we use so can bill as a Level 3 or Level 4 visit?

This three-arm trial randomized 40 patients each into inhaled isopropyl + ondansetron oral dissolving tablet, inhaled isopropyl + oral placebo, and inhaled placebo + ondansetron oral dissolving tablet. Even despite the limitations of sample size with regard to statistical significance, the isopropyl arms are the clear winners with regard to their primary outcome of nausea score reduction at 30 minutes. Objective outcome measures were mixed – receipt of rescue antiemetics mirrored the primary outcome, but measures of ED length-of-stay and admission disposition could not demonstrate a difference.

Some fun tidbits here – patients were allowed to have an unlimited supply of alcohol medication pads to use throughout their ED stay, not just on initial arrival. They did not quantify how many pads were utilized by patients included in these arms. The authors also evaluated the effectiveness of blinding on their study, and, as expected, found it’s hard to miss the distinctive scent of isopropyl alcohol – and this introduces a potential source of bias to these results.

Overall, at least, it certainly seems reasonable to use isopropyl alcohol pads as adjunctive therapy for nausea in the ED – and as an inexpensive, over-the-counter option for patients (well, and doctors) at home.

“Aromatherapy Versus Oral Ondansetron for Antiemetic Therapy Among Adult Emergency Department Patients: A Randomized Controlled Trial”
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29463461

On Anesthesiology Knows Sedation

“These guidelines are intended for use by all providers who perform moderate procedural sedation and analgesia in any inpatient or outpatient setting …”

That is to say, effectively by fiat, if you perform procedural sedation, these guidelines apply to YOU.

This is a publication by the American Society of Anesthesiologists, and sponsored by various dental and radiology organizations. This replaces a 2012 version of this document – and it has changed for both better and worse.

Falling into the “better” column of this document, this guideline no longer perpetuates the myth of requiring a period of fasting prior to an urgent or emergent procedure. Their new recommendation:

“In urgent or emergent situations where complete gastric emptying is not possible, do not delay moderate procedural sedation based on fasting time alone”

However, some things are definitely “worse”. By far the largest problem with these guidelines – reflecting the exclusion of emergency medicine and critical care specialties from the writing or approving group – is their classification of propofol and ketamine as agents intended for general anesthesia. They specifically differentiate practice with these agents from the use of benzodiazepines or adjunctive opiates by stating:

“When moderate procedural sedation with sedative/ analgesic medications intended for general anesthesia by any route is intended, provide care consistent with that required for general anesthesia.”

These guidelines do not describe the care of patients receiving general anesthesia, but, obviously, we are not performing general anesthesia in the Emergency Department – and, I expect most hospitals do not credential their Emergency Physicians for general anesthesia. The impact of these guidelines in a practical sense on individual health system policy is unclear, particularly in the context of safe use of these medications by EPs for decades, but it’s certainly just one more pretentious obstacle to providing safe and effective care for our patients.

“Practice Guidelines for Moderate Procedural Sedation and Analgesia 2018”

http://anesthesiology.pubs.asahq.org/article.aspx?articleid=2670190

“The Newest Threat to Emergency Department Procedural Sedation”

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29429580

TACO Time!

One of the best acronyms in medicine: TACO. Of no solace to those afflicted by it, transfusion-related circulatory overload is one of the least-explicitly recognized complications of blood product transfusion. The consent for blood products typically focuses on the rare transmissibility of viruses and occurrence of autoimmune reactions, yet TACO is far more frequent.

This report from an ongoing transfusion surveillance study catalogued 20,845 patients receiving transfusions of 128,263 blood components. The incidence of TACO was one case per 100 transfused patients. Then, these authors identified 200 patients suffering TACO, and compared their baseline characteristics to 405 patients receiving similar transfusion intensity, but who did not develop TACO. Clinically relevant risk factors for developing TACO identified in their analysis were, essentially:

  • Congestive heart failure
  • End-stage or acute renal disease
  • End-stage liver disease
  • Need for emergency surgery

… or, basically, the population for whom a propensity for circulatory overload would be expected. It appears, generally speaking, clinicians were aware of the increased risks in these specific patients, as a greater percentage received diuretic treatment prior to transfusion as well. 30-day mortality in those suffering TACO was approximately 20%, roughly double that of those matched controls.

More good reasons to adhere to as many restrictive transfusion guidelines as feasible.

“Contemporary Risk Factors and Outcomes of Transfusion-Associated Circulatory Overload”

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29300236

The Gabapentinoid Cure-All

Gabapentinoids – gabapentin and pregabalin – were traditionally prescribed for their approved indications: the treatment of seizures and various manifestations of neuropathic pain. Of course, there are many newer agents for epilepsy, and the the market for neuropathic pain ought to remain fairly stable. Therefore, why has gabapentinoid use effectively tripled over the past decade, as generally described by this research letter?

Most notably, in this letter, gapapentin use increased most in those with multiple comorbidities, as well as those with concurrent opioid and benzodiazepine prescriptions. Considering the lack of proven efficacy and the potential for misuse or adverse effects, there’s frankly no excuse for such rampant overuse. Nearly all this expansion represents waste and harm in our health system, with mixed and scattershot evaluation of its various applications almost certain to mislead rather than inform true treatment effects.

It seems it really ought to be time to reduce prescribing of gabapentinoids – particularly off-label – but the reverse seems true!

“Gabapentinoid Use in the United States 2002 Through 2015”
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamainternalmedicine/article-abstract/2666788

Treatment Failure, or is Treatment the Failure?

Acute respiratory tract infections – otitis media, streptococcal pharyngitis, and sinusitis – comprise virtually a laundry list for antibiotic overuse in self-limited conditions. Certainly, a subset of each of these conditions are true bacterial infections and, again, a subset of these have their resolution hastened by antibiotics – and, finally, a subset of those would have clinically important worsening if antibiotics were not used. Conversely, the harms of antibiotics are generally well-recognized,though not necessarily routinely appreciated in clinical practice.

This patient-centered outcomes study, with both retrospective and prospective portions, enrolled children diagnosed with the aforementioned “acute respiratory tract infections” and evaluated outcomes differences between those receiving “narrow-spectrum” antibiotics and those receiving “broad-spectrum antibiotics”. Before even delving into their results, let’s go straight to this quote from the limitations:

Because children were identified based on clinician diagnosis plus an antibiotic prescription to identify bacterial acute respiratory tract infections, some children likely had viral infections.

“Some children likely had viral infections” is a strong contender for understatement of the year.

So, with untold numbers of viral infections included, it should be no surprise these authors found no difference in “treatment failure” between narrow-spectrum and broad-spectrum antibiotics. Nor, in their prospective portion, did they identify any statistically difference in surrogates for wellness, such as missed school, symptom resolution, or pediatric quality of life. However, adverse events were higher (35.6% vs. 25.1%, p < 0.001) in the broad-spectrum antibiotic cohort, and this accompanied smaller, but consistent, differences favoring narrow-spectrum antibiotics on those wellness measures.

So, the takeaway: broad-spectrum antibiotics conferred no advantage, only harms. If you’re using antibiotics (unnecessarily), use the cheapest, most benign ones possible.

“Association of Broad- vs Narrow-Spectrum Antibiotics With Treatment Failure, Adverse Events, and Quality of Life in Children With Acute Respiratory Tract Infections”

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2666503

Intravenous or Oral Analgesia?

Or, better translated, is the new, fancier option really superior?

In many cases, the intravenous option is superior than the oral alternative. Cephalexin, for example, reaches higher serum levels via intravenous administration. The oral versions of morphine and hydromorphone are not equivalent intravenously. So, what about acetaminophen/paracetamol?

It is already well-established (by the manufacturer) the intravenous version of acetaminophen reaches higher peak serum levels, and does so more quickly, than oral versions. This study, however, asks the question from a patient-oriented standpoint – does this actually provide superior pain relief?

The short answer is no. This small study analyzing 87 patients receiving intravenous or oral acetaminophen in a double-blind, double-dummy fashion found no difference in mean change in pain levels at 30 minutes.  This is consistent with the limited previous evidence, and reasonably suggests there is no justification for IV use when patients are capable of taking the oral alternative.

Interestingly, this same group recently presented these data in abstract form with 108 patients rather than 87, and using median pain score reduction rather than means. Their abstract results are consistent with these, but the discordant number of analyzed patients is odd.

“Intravenous versus oral paracetamol for acute pain in adults in the emergency department setting: a prospective, double-blind, double-dummy, randomised controlled trial.”
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29247042