Objective: To report initial experience with the use of intravenous tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) to treat acute ischaemic stroke at an Australian tertiary-care hospital.
Design: Retrospective audit of computerised hospital stroke database.
Participants and setting: All patients with acute ischaemic stroke treated with intravenous tPA between April 1999 and July 2002 at the Royal Melbourne Hospital, VIC.
Main outcome measures: Times from stroke onset to arrival at the emergency department (ED) and treatment; rates of symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH); clinical outcome at three months; and violations of treatment protocol.
Results: Of 932 patients admitted with ischaemic stroke, 30 were treated with intravenous tPA. Median time from stroke onset to tPA treatment was 2 h 48 min, and median door-to-needle time was 1 h 49 min. Door-to-needle time improved in the last 12 months of the audit, with four of 15 patients achieving the recommended 60 min. Eleven patients (37%) had excellent clinical outcomes at three-month follow-up (modified Rankin score, 0-1), and 15 (50%) were functionally independent (score, 0-2). Mortality rate was 10%, similar to that of all ischaemic stroke patients during the audit period. Two patients (7%) had symptomatic ICH. Treatment deviated from protocol in seven patients (23%), five of whom received tPA over three hours after stroke onset.
Conclusion: Rates of favourable outcomes and symptomatic ICH at our hospital were similar to those achieved in international phase III and IV trials in specialised centres.