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Abstract Details

Quality Analysis of Adherence to AHA/ASA Guidelines in the Management of Intraparenchymal Hemorrhage
General Neurology
P1 - Poster Session 1 (8:00 AM-9:00 AM)
7-001

To assess institutional adherence to key 2022 AHA/ASA guidelines in the acute management of intraparenchymal hemorrhage (IPH) and to identify opportunities for quality improvement.

Adherence to 2022 AHA/ASA time-sensitive IPH guidelines improves outcomes, yet real-world compliance remains inconsistent.

We retrospectively analyzed patients admitted with IPH to a comprehensive stroke center from January–December 2024. Inclusion criteria: IPH on CT head, presenting SBP >160 mmHg, and evaluation via code stroke or neurology consult. Exclusion criteria: interfacility transfer, initial SBP <160 mmHg, or non-IPH.

Quality metrics (per 2022 AHA/ASA Class I/II): time to neuroimaging, time to BP medication (≤1 hr of CTH), SBP <160 mmHg within 3 hrs of arrival, repeat CTH ≤6 hrs to assess hematoma expansion, ICH score documentation, and discharge mRS.

Of 119 patients, 77 met inclusion criteria; 61 arrived as code stroke and 16 were evaluated for AMS. Quality metric adherence was inconsistent. Only 28%(17/61) code stroke patients had imaging within 15 min. Among non-code strokes, 50% had >3 hr imaging delays.

Among 77 patients, compliance was: BP therapy within 1 hr of CTH in 60(77%); SBP <160 mmHg within 3 hrs of arrival in 56(73%); repeat CTH ≤6 hrs in 32(41%); ICH score in 72(93%).

24 had hematoma expansion; delayed BP initiation and BP control was seen in only 4 and 3 cases respectively, suggesting limited association. Severe functional decline (≥2-point mRS worsening) occurred in 57%(44/77), and this occurred in all patients with hematoma expansion. Most of the 10 deaths involved anticoagulation or delayed BP control.

AHA/ASA guidelines were generally adhered to, but time-sensitive ICH care was delayed. AMS with severe hypertension should prompt rapid CTH. Targeted interventions (order sets, education, audit-feedback, real-time alerts) are needed to optimize care. Limitations include small sample size and lack of 3-month mRS, which may show outcome benefits of early BP control.

 

Authors/Disclosures
Manpreet Kaur, MD (Rutgers University Hospital)
PRESENTER
Dr. Kaur has nothing to disclose.
Laura Mora Munoz, MD Dr. Mora Munoz has nothing to disclose.
Roberto Gomez, MD (Rutgers New Jersey Medical School Department of Neurology) Dr. Gomez has nothing to disclose.