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Abstract Details

High-frequency PT in Acute Stroke Inpatients: Implementation and Early Outcomes (BID-FAST)
Neuro-rehabilitation
S17 - Neuro-rehabilitation: Expanding Therapeutic Approaches (3:30 PM-3:42 PM)
001

To determine whether implementing twice-daily (BID) inpatient physical therapy (PT) improves outcomes compared with standard 3–5 sessions per week for patients hospitalized with acute stroke

The optimal inpatient PT approach after stroke remains unclear; frequency, intensity, and timing are not well defined. Very early, high-intensity therapy may be poorly tolerated, whereas shorter, more frequent sessions could enhance participation and functional outcomes without added risk. Current AHA/ASA guidance does not mandate a uniform PT frequency. To address this gap, our center introduced a service-level shift to twice-daily PT (BID-FAST/ BID-Frequency Augmented Stroke Therapy) during acute stroke hospitalization

Retrospective pre–post cohort study at a comprehensive stroke center across two four-month periods. The pre-implementation cohort received standard-frequency PT (3–5 sessions/week), and the post-implementation cohort received twice-daily PT (BID-FAST). Outcomes were hospital length of stay (LOS), discharge disposition, and discharge modified Rankin Scale (mRS). Between-group comparisons used Welch’s t and Fisher’s exact tests with 95% confidence intervals

Among 296 patients (standard n=155; BID-FAST n=141), mean LOS decreased from 6.83 to 4.61 days after BID-FAST implementation (difference 2.22 days; 95% CI 0.57–3.87; p=0.0086). Discharge mRS was similar between cohorts (2.13 vs 2.07; p=0.777). The proportion discharged home increased from 56.1% (87/155) to 58.2% (82/141) (difference +2.0 percentage points; 95% CI −9.3 to +13.3; p=0.814)

Implementing twice-daily inpatient PT for acute stroke was associated with a clinically and statistically significant reduction in hospital length of stay, with no detectable worsening in discharge function or disposition. These findings support therapy frequency as a modifiable component of acute stroke rehabilitation and motivate prospective studies to test causality and quantify effects on disability and discharge destination

Authors/Disclosures
Alexander Vorobyev, MD (Medical University of South Carolina)
PRESENTER
Dr. Vorobyev has nothing to disclose.
Walaa Elsekaily, MBBS (MUSC) Ms. Elsekaily has nothing to disclose.
Elizabeth A. Blalock, Medical Student Ms. Blalock has nothing to disclose.
Mahnoor Islam, MD, MBBS (Medical University of South Carolina) Dr. Islam has nothing to disclose.
Steven M. Thomas, MPH Mr. Thomas has nothing to disclose.
Christine Holmstedt, DO The institution of Dr. Holmstedt has received research support from NIH. The institution of Dr. Holmstedt has received research support from Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute.
Sinead O. Farrelly, PT Ms. Farrelly has nothing to disclose.