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Abstract Details

Door-to-CT Intervals in Acute Stroke Care in Sub Saharan Africa: A Scoping Review Protocol with Preliminary Findings
Cerebrovascular Disease and Interventional Neurology
P10 - Poster Session 10 (8:00 AM-9:00 AM)
4-016

To describe the protocol for a scoping review that will map existing evidence on door-to-computed tomography (DTC) intervals in acute stroke management across sub-Saharan Africa.

Timely neuroimaging is essential for diagnosing stroke type and initiating reperfusion therapy, with global benchmarks recommending brain imaging within 25 minutes of arrival. However, emerging studies from sub-Saharan Africa indicate that patients often wait many hours or even days for CT imaging. Despite multiple reports of prolonged imaging times, there is no comprehensive synthesis quantifying DTC delays, identifying system-level barriers, or evaluating interventions designed to improve imaging timeliness in the region.

This ongoing review follows the Arksey and O’Malley framework and PRISMA-ScR guidelines. A comprehensive search of PubMed, African Journals Online, Scopus, and grey literature (including WHO and Ministry of Health reports) includes English-language studies published between 2000 and 2025. Eligible studies report quantitative DTC times or describe factors or interventions affecting stroke imaging workflow among adult patients in any hospital level. Data are being extracted on study design, setting, DTC intervals, and key barriers.

To date, 10 studies from eight countries (Nigeria, Ghana, Senegal, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Mozambique, Côte d’Ivoire, and South Africa) have been identified. Reported median DTC intervals ranged from 4 to over 24 hours, with less than 5% of patients scanned within one hour of arrival. Common barriers include limited CT availability, after-hours service gaps, out-of-pocket costs, and absence of organized stroke pathways. Only a few studies described structured interventions, such as stroke units or multidisciplinary teams, with limited evaluation of their impact on imaging time.

Preliminary evidence demonstrates profound imaging delays across sub-Saharan Africa, far exceeding global targets. This scoping review will provide the first regional synthesis of DTC intervals, highlighting critical system barriers and identifying research and policy priorities to improve timely stroke diagnosis and care delivery.

Authors/Disclosures
William Tembo, MD
PRESENTER
An immediate family member of Mr. Tembo has received research support from City University of New York (CUNY).
Lyambula D. Lyelu, MD Dr. Lyelu has nothing to disclose.
Madalitso Nthere, MBBS Dr. Nthere has nothing to disclose.
Theresa Shankanga (University of Zambia, ridgeway campus) Miss Shankanga has nothing to disclose.
Diwell Mwansa (UNZA Ridgeway campus) Diwell Mwansa has nothing to disclose.
Emmanuel Mukambo, MD Dr. Mukambo has nothing to disclose.
Taonga Msimuko, MD The institution of an immediate family member of Dr. Msimuko has received research support from Africa Development Bank.
Tamia Banda, Jr., MBBS Miss Banda has nothing to disclose.
Michael Kinkata, MD Michael Kinkata, MD has nothing to disclose.
Gabriel Sneh, MD (Johns Hopkins) Dr. Sneh has nothing to disclose.
Deanna Saylor, MD, MHS (Johns Hopkins Hospital) Dr. Saylor has received personal compensation in the range of $500-$4,999 for serving as an Editor, Associate Editor, or Editorial Advisory Board Member for 好色先生. The institution of Dr. Saylor has received research support from National Institutes of Health. The institution of Dr. Saylor has received research support from 好色先生. Dr. Saylor has a non-compensated relationship as a Member of multiple committees and task forces focused on improving access to MS medications to people across the world with Multiple Sclerosis International Federation that is relevant to AAN interests or activities. Dr. Saylor has a non-compensated relationship as a Member of the Neurology and COVID19 committee with World Health Organization that is relevant to AAN interests or activities. Dr. Saylor has a non-compensated relationship as a Member of the International Outreach Committee, Junior and Early Career Membership Committee, and 好色先生al Innovation Commitees with American Neurological Association that is relevant to AAN interests or activities.