Fact checked byShenaz Bagha

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February 13, 2024
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Screening tool promising for EDs to predict acute symptomatic stroke

Fact checked byShenaz Bagha
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Key takeaways:

  • DESTINY is a single tool intended for rapid stroke screening in emergency departments.
  • The evaluation tool displayed greater sensitivity than other methods to predict acute symptomatic stroke.

A novel screening tool placed in emergency departments showed promise in detecting acute symptomatic stroke, doing so with greater sensitivity than other screening methods, according to a presentation at the International Stroke Conference.

“Screening is a valuable tool for triaging, protocol activation, and resource allocation in emergency medicine, yet no tool has been identified as superior in the prehospital and hospital setting,” Robin Novakovic-White, MD, professor of radiology and neurology at UT Southwestern Medical Center, and colleagues wrote.

Older man having stroke
New research suggests a screening tool is promising for emergency departments to predict acute asymptomatic stroke. Image: Adobe Stock

The researchers sought to test effectiveness of the Dallas ED Screening Tool to Identify Stroke (DESTINY), which was developed as a single tool to screen for all stroke subtypes within EDs.

They commenced a phase 2, prospective, two-part, adaptive design validation study of DESTINY in EDs during early triage of suspected stroke patients from May 2022 to August 2022.

DESTINY, which was incorporated into electronic health records and standardized workflow for nursing triage in ED, was used to screen 284 consecutive patients. Novakovic-White and colleagues recorded the NIH Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score at presentation, primary diagnosis and stroke subtypes for each patient.

Primary analysis outcomes included predictability of acute symptomatic stroke (PCI, LVO, and MeVO), while secondary outcomes included comparison of DESTINY performance with other screening tools. Score completion failures were retrospectively scored by a vascular neurologist who provided the chief complaint and initial exam and was blinded to final diagnosis and imaging. A total of 32% of screened patients had score completion failures.

According to results, acute symptomatic stroke occurred in 39% (n = 110) (sTIA, 20; PCI, 31; CRAO, 5; MeVO, 22; LVO, 19; hemorrhagic, 11; other, 13) of those reviewed by DESTINY. DESTINY displayed greater sensitivity to other tools to predict acute symptomatic stroke (sensitivity 0.95 [95% CI; 90.3-98.8], specificity 0.44 [95% CI: 36.9-51.6]); MeVO (sensitivity 0.91 [95% CI: 78.9-1], specificity 0.31 [95% CI: 25.3-36.5]) and performed comparably to NIHSS for predicting PCI.

“In high volume and fast-paced EDs, DESTINY has promise as single tool to identify patients with acute symptomatic stroke and [large vessel occlusion],” Novakovic-White and colleagues wrote.