A brief prehospital stroke severity scale identifies ischemic stroke patients harboring persisting large arterial occlusions

Bijen Nazliel, Sidney Starkman, David S Liebeskind, Bruce Ovbiagele, Doojin Kim, Nerses Sanossian, Latisha Ali, Brian Buck, Pablo Villablanca, Fernando Vinuela, Gary Duckwiler, Reza Jahan, Jeffrey L Saver, Bijen Nazliel, Sidney Starkman, David S Liebeskind, Bruce Ovbiagele, Doojin Kim, Nerses Sanossian, Latisha Ali, Brian Buck, Pablo Villablanca, Fernando Vinuela, Gary Duckwiler, Reza Jahan, Jeffrey L Saver

Abstract

Background and purpose: The Los Angeles Motor Scale (LAMS) is a brief 3-item stroke severity assessment measure designed for prehospital and Emergency Department use.

Methods: The LAMS and NIHSS were scored in under-12-hour acute anterior circulation ischemic stroke patients. Stroke severity ratings were correlated with cervicocerebral vascular occlusion on CTA, MRA, and catheter angiography. Receiver operating curves, c statistics, and likelihood ratios were used to evaluate the predictive value for vascular occlusion of stroke severity ratings.

Results: Among 119 patients, mean age was 67 (+/-18), 45% were male. Time from onset to ED arrival was mean 190 minutes (range 10 to 660). Persisting large vessel occlusions (PLVOs) were present in 62% of patients. LAMS stroke severity scores were higher in patients harboring a vascular occlusion, median 5 (IQR 4 to 5) versus 2 (IQR 1 to 3). Similarly, NIHSS stroke severity scores were higher in PLVO patients, 19 (14 to 24) versus 5 (3 to 7). ROC curves demonstrated that the LAMS was highly effective in identifying patients with PLVOs, c statistic 0.854. At the optimal threshold of 4 or higher, LAMS scores showed sensitivity 0.81, specificity 0.89, and overall accuracy 0.85. LAMS performance was comparable to NIHSS performance (c statistic 0.933). The positive likelihood ratio associated with a LAMS score > or = 4 was 7.36 and the negative likelihood ratio 0.21.

Conclusions: Stroke severity assessed by the LAMS predicts presence of large artery anterior circulation occlusion with high sensitivity and specificity. The LAMS is a promising instrument for use by prehospital personnel to identify select stroke patients for direct transport to Comprehensive Stroke Centers capable of endovascular interventions.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Receiver operating curve showing specificity (asterisks) and sensitivity (open circles) of LAMS Scores in predicting persisting large vessel occlusion.

Source: PubMed

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