key: cord-0857200-w8r6arut authors: Faigle, Roland; Johnson, Brenda; Summers, Debbie; Khatri, Pooja; Anderson, Craig S.; Urrutia, Victor C. title: Low-Intensity Monitoring After Stroke Thrombolysis During the COVID-19 Pandemic date: 2020-06-08 journal: Neurocrit Care DOI: 10.1007/s12028-020-00998-0 sha: 0dd53631a76ca0b766da85efea3d71e2cdc5e2ed doc_id: 857200 cord_uid: w8r6arut nan The COVID-19 pandemic of 2020 poses an unprecedented challenge to health-care systems all across the USA and around the world. Supply and equipment shortages are already a daunting reality in many hospitals and imminent for others. Over the coming months, the projected intensive care unit (ICU) bed capacity gap in the USA ranges from 90,000 to 300,000, depending on infection rates and the success of social distancing and other measures to 'flatten the curve' [1, 2] . This is in excess of all available ICU beds, including those typically allocated to critically ill patients with stroke and other neurological diseases. In addition to material and equipment shortages, health-care personnel are becoming increasingly stretched as the pandemic continues, with neurology providers and nurses being repurposed or re-assigned, and others temporarily dropping out of the work-force for illness, self-isolation after exposure, or after becoming infected themselves. The impact on stroke care is potentially catastrophic. Discussions and media reports on universal hospital donot-resuscitate (DNR) orders for COVID-19 patients and the sensibility of a single ventilator simultaneously supporting two patients illustrate the previously unthinkable despair and dilemma of decision-making clinicians now face as a result of COVID-19 [3, 4] . To our knowledge, there are at present no data projecting the impact of COVID-19 on neurological ICU-bed and -resource shortages, and on stroke care and outcomes. It is very apparent, though, that triage systems and care protocols will need to adapt as the outbreak continues to disrupt our health-care system. Some US stroke teams, as elsewhere, have adapted by responding to stroke codes with full personal protective equipment (PPE) and developed protocols for safe intubation of endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) patients [5, 6] . Some adaptations are being developed in response to urgent needs and without time for proper evaluation. In addition to urgently addressing critical shortages and safety issues, frameworks are required to allow rapid evaluation of the safety and efficacy of these changes and of new interventions. Another emerging concern in low-resource environments is whether the monitoring intensity of a subpopulation of acute ischemic stroke (AIS) patients undergoing treatment with intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) can safely be reduced. Safe low-intensity monitoring of some post-IVT patients would not only allow for cost-effective resource utilization, but also free up resources for patients with more urgent need for intensive monitoring and care, such as critically ill COVID-19 patients. Efforts by us and others to promote appropriate resource allocation for stable post-IVT stroke patients have preceded the COVID-19 era [7] [8] [9] , but have gained additional relevance over the last few months. Herein, we share our protocol for a subpopulation of post-IVT patients that may be safely monitored in a low-intensity resource environment based on preliminary results of the previously published proof-of-concept Optimal Post Tpa-Iv Monitoring in Ischemic STroke (OPTIMIST) study [7] , and our upcoming definitive clinical trial and registry funded prior to the emergence of COVID-19. We summarize the current evidence for our protocol, discuss the protocol in detail, and call for participation in a clinical trial, OPTI-MISTmain, and registry, OPTIMISTregistry. IVT with tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) represents a cornerstone of evidence-based AIS care which improves outcomes in carefully selected patients [10] . Symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage (sICH) is the most feared complication of this therapy, harboring the risk of early neurological deterioration and mortality. Thus, clinical practice guidelines recommend that post-IVT patients are closely monitored over at least 24 h to allow prevention and early detection of sICH, neurological deterioration, and other complications [10] . Post-IVT patients are commonly admitted to an ICU depending on institutional protocols, but regardless of physical patient location, current standard monitoring protocol requires 1:1 or 1:2 nursing in order to provide the recommended frequency of vital sign checks and neurological assessments: every 15 min for the first 2 h, then every 30 min for the next 6 h, and thereafter every hour up to the 24 h mark [11] . This monitoring schedule was derived from the pivotal National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke (NINDS) stroke trial [12, 13] , developed in the context of the initial cautious evaluation of IVT for acute stroke in the early 1990s. It has since been adopted into clinical practice by consensus and convention and has hitherto remained largely unchallenged. Yet, it is unclear whether this standard of highly intensive nursing monitoring should continue to be routinely applied to stable post-IVT patients with mild neurological deficits, who have no critical care needs and are otherwise deemed low risk for complications. Over the two decades since regulatory approval of tPA, clinical experience, registries, and further trials have established IVT as a relatively safe treatment modality in AIS. Indeed, real-world sICH rates of 2-7% are generally reported, and only a relatively small fraction of patients experience additional early neurological deterioration [14] [15] [16] . Stroke severity, measured on the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS), is one of the strongest predictors of sICH and subsequent need for critical care of post-IVT patients. In a pooled analysis of patients from multiple IVT trials, the absolute risk of fatal type 2 parenchymal ICH [17] related to IVT increased from 1.6% with a baseline NIHSS score of 5 to 10, to 6.8% with an NIHSS score > 21 [18] . Similarly, post-IVT patients with an NIHSS score ≥ 10 have almost 8 times higher odds of requiring critical care interventions compared to patients with a NIHSS < 10 [8, 19] . In addition, timing matters: most sICH occurs in the first few hours after IVT [20] , and regardless of this risk, most post-IVT patients who need critical care (i.e., due to malignant hypertension, difficulty in protecting their airway, etc.) during the first 24 h generally declare themselves by the end of the tPA infusion [8] . Among patients with mild-moderate neurological deficit (NIHSS < 10) who do not require critical care after the tPA infusion is completed, less than 1% subsequently require ICU care. All these data suggest that post-IVT care does not have to be a 'one-size-fits-all' approach and that NIHSS combined with time can identify a subpopulation of post-IVT patients with low risk of complications. In order to de-escalate the monitoring intensity of lowrisk post-IVT AIS patients, we developed a low-intensity post-IVT monitoring protocol for patients who presented with NIHSS scores < 10 and had no critical care needs at the end of the tPA infusion. The protocol is identical to the current standard in the first two hours after administration of the tPA bolus, that is, vital sign checks and neurological assessments every 15 min for the first 2 h. Thereafter, patients can be transferred to a non-critical care environment, such as a telemetry-monitored acute stroke unit or comparable destination unit capable of caring for stroke patients. Monitoring under the lowintensity protocol commences after the first 2 h and is provided regardless of physical patient location. The protocol is comprised of vital sign checks and neurological assessment on admission (arrival) to the destination unit, then 1 h after admission, then every 2 h for another 8 h, followed by vital sign checks and neurological assessments every 4 h until 24-h post-IVT period is complete. The safety of this low-intensity monitoring protocol was evaluated prospectively in the Optimal Post Tpa-Iv Monitoring in Ischemic STroke (OPTIMIST; NCT02039375) study, a single-center, open-label, single-arm study at Johns Hopkins Hospital [7] . In OPTI-MIST, we included 35 AIS patients who received IVT under standard guideline-recommended criteria, if they had an NIHSS < 10 and did not have a clinical need for ICU care at the end of the tPA infusion. Patients were monitored via our low-intensity protocol in a telemetry stroke unit without critical or intermediate care capabilities with a nurse-to-patient ratio of 1:3. There were no serious adverse events, no patients that required critical care, and the median 90-day NIHSS and modified Rankin Scale scores (mRS) were 0. However, generalizability must be cautioned given the small sample size. The proportion of patients potentially eligible to be monitored under this protocol, and thus freeing up resources and ICU beds, is substantial considering that approximately 40% of all AIS patients receiving IVT patients present with NIHSS < 10 [21] . The OPTIMISTmain study was conceived as an international, multicenter, pragmatic, prospective, steppedwedge cluster randomized controlled trial with blinded outcome assessment (NCT03734640). The objectives are to reliably determine whether low-intensity post-IVT monitoring is clinically non-inferior and economically beneficial, relative to standard of care monitoring. The stepped-wedge cluster randomized design was chosen to avoid contamination of the randomized intervention across patients, and to facilitate hospital-wide implementation and adherence to protocol procedures. Sites (hospitals) with an established acute stroke program, a geographically defined area dedicated to stroke care such as an acute stroke unit, and the ability to implement the low-intensity monitoring protocol are eligible for participation. All sites will be randomly allocated to one of three groups to recruit groups of patients, moving from control to intervention of the low-intensity monitoring protocol as part of routine clinical practice (see Supplemental File). Adult post-IVT patients are eligible for enrollment if they have a mild neurological deficit (NIHSS < 10), stable vital signs, and do not require ongoing critical care at 2 h after initiation of IVT, as assessed by the treating clinician investigator. In addition to excluding patients with critical care needs, those perceived to be at highrisk of further neurological or medical deterioration are to be excluded. Patients who receive EVT after IVT may be included provided they otherwise fulfill the inclusion criteria. Patients who do not meet inclusion criteria are monitored as per the current standard. The low-intensity monitoring protocol in OPTIMISTmain is identical to that of the original OPTIMIST protocol, but without the need for vital sign check and neurological assessment at the 3-h mark; this is to streamline protocol implementation. In OPTIMISTmain, the low-intensity monitoring protocol diverges from the standard monitoring protocol at 1 h after IVT completion (2 h after IVT bolus) and includes vital sign checks and neurological assessments every 2 h for 8 h, followed by vital sign checks and neurological assessments every 4 h until completion of the 24-h post-IVT period (Fig. 1) . Figure 2 depicts the OPTIMISTmain monitoring protocol for bedside implementation. The primary outcome is an ordinal shift in functional recovery according to the mRS scores at 90 days. Secondary outcomes include sICH, NIHSS at Day 7, length of hospital stay, and health economic indicators. The OPTIMISTmain protocol synopsis is attached as a supplement. OPTIMISTmain involves a staged roll-out with a start-up phase including 20 sites in the USA; an additional 100 sites outside the USA, including sites in Australia, South America, and the UK, are intended to follow shortly after the US roll-out. The US portion of the trial is funded by Genentech. Due to the aforementioned challenges imposed by COVID-19, stroke care will undergo substantial changes in the months ahead, and likely beyond, as all aspects of society are disrupted. Any changes to health systems should be based on evidence, but the reality of the current public health catastrophe imposed by COVID-19 is that many changes in stroke care will be born out of necessity rather than high-level evidence. Therefore, we have refocused the OPTIMISTmain trial Fig. 1 Frequency of vital sign checks and neurological assessments in OPTIMISTmain. Adapted from Faigle et al. [7] , with permission of SAGE Publications, Ltd. IVT: intravenous thrombolysis to offer a solution to the urgent need for pragmatic approaches to resource utilization, while also taking an opportunity to generate evidence on the impact of COVID-19 and changes to health services. We aim to expedite roll-out of the study according to steppedwedge cluster randomized trial design but allowing flexibility of participating sites in switching early to the low-intensity monitoring protocol prior to the assigned time epoch if required by real-world demands. Additionally, we will implement a registry, OPTIMIS-Tregistry, open to all interested sites that may not be able to participate in OPTIMISTmain, but wish to use Fig. 2 Patient eligibility criteria, safety procedures, and the low-intensity monitoring protocol in OPTIMISTmain. AIS acute ischemic stroke, Bipap bilevel positive airway pressure, BP blood pressure, DBP diastolic blood pressure, HR heart rate, ICU intensive care unit, IVT intravenous thrombolysis, LOC level of consciousness, NIHSS National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale, SBP systolic blood pressure American hospital capacity and projected need for COVID-19 patient care Critical supply shortages-The need for ventilators and personal protective equipment during the Covid-19 pandemic Joint Statement on Multiple Patients Per Ventilator SCCM The toughest triage-allocating ventilators in a pandemic Preparing for Stroke and COVID-19: Open Discussion with Regional Colleagues. 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