Prehospital emergency physician activation of interventional cardiology team reduces door-to-balloon time in ST-elevation myocardial infarction
Olivier Grosgurin, Jérôme Plojoux, Pierre-Frédéric Keller, Marc Niquille, René N'koulou, François Mach, François P Sarasin, Olivier T Rutschmann, Olivier Grosgurin, Jérôme Plojoux, Pierre-Frédéric Keller, Marc Niquille, René N'koulou, François Mach, François P Sarasin, Olivier T Rutschmann
Abstract
Question under study: To explore whether early activation of an interventional cardiology team, by prehospital emergency physicians, reduces door-to-balloon time (DTBT) in patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) diagnosed with prehospital ECG.
Design: before-after comparison.
Setting: emergency department (ED) of an urban teaching hospital with a catheterisation laboratory open continuously.
Study subjects: patients with STEMI diagnosed in the prehospital setting or in the ED within 12 hours of symptoms.
Intervention: a paging system or "STEMI alarm", activated by prehospital physicians, which simultaneously notified both the catherisation laboratory and cardiology teams before the patient's arrival to the ED.
Outcome measures: DTBT and the proportion of patients with DTBT <90 minutes.
Results: A total of 196 patients were included; 77 before and 119 after implementation of the "STEMI alarm". Between the two periods, median DTBT decreased from 109 to 76 minutes (p <0.001) and the proportion of patients treated within 90 minutes increased from 36% to 66% (p <0.001). During intervention, the STEMI alarm was activated in 67 patients (56%). In these cases the median DTBT was 50 minutes, with 96% within 90 minutes. The alarm was inappropriately activated in 9 cases (11%).
Conclusions: Catheterisation laboratory activation by a prehospital emergency physician markedly reduces DTBT in STEMI patients.
Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00497419.
Source: PubMed