Background
Ischemic stroke is a leading cause of persistent disability in Western societies [
1]. Established therapies comprising stroke unit treatment [
2], i.v. thrombolysis (IVT) with rt-PA (recombinant tissue plasminogen activator) [
3] and endovascular therapy (EVT) [
4] can increase the likelihood of a favourable outcome when patients present immediately after symptom onset.
With the worldwide spread of Severe-Acute-Respiratory-Syndrome-Corona-Virus-2 (SARS-Cov-2), several reports were published on a significant decrease in the number of patients treated with acute medical conditions such as stroke or myocardial infarction [
5‐
8]. To date the exact reasons remain unclear but reduced emergency department (ED) visits due to nation-wide lockdown rules with social distancing, patients’ fear of getting infected with SARS-CoV-2, and changes in the perception of hospitals during pandemic are possible explanations [
7‐
9]. While restrictions are still in place and lockdown rules upheld, the effects are incompletely understood yet. With the nationwide first two deaths reported on 9 March 2020 in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, the State government ordered the closure of schools and kindergarten as early as the 16 March 2020, and one day later the shutdown of stores not essential for daily living. First lift of restrictions was declared for 11 May 2020. After a brief decline in the incidence of SARS-CoV-2 in summer, the federal government decided to shut down again when numbers rose in fall, in a “lockdown light” scenario from 2 November until 15 December 2020 with less severe rules compared to the spring lockdown.
In this retrospective, observational single-center study we provide a brief status report from the University Hospital Düsseldorf. Düsseldorf is the capital of Germany’s most densely populated state North-Rhine-Westphalia (17.93 million residents) with 612.000 inhabitants and three stroke units. The University Hospital Düsseldorf is the only tertiary stroke center in Düsseldorf providing EVT for an area of 1.000.000 inhabitants with a comprehensive stroke unit consisting of 24 beds including 12 monitoring and 12 non-monitoring beds. It takes care of approximately 1.000 patients per year in non-COVID-19 periods.
Düsseldorf is located 58 km apart from the district of Heinsberg. This region was the first to be classified as a particularly affected area in Germany in spring 2020 by the Robert Koch Institute, the national center for infectious diseases. We report on the number of patients admitted to our interdisciplinary ED and provide a detailed analysis of stroke patients during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic lockdown-periods. Our interdisciplinary ED primarily treats all emergencies except for cases of ophthalmology and gynecology and obstetrics. These specialties have their own emergency premises in other buildings.
Discussion
Recent literature suggests that during the COVID-19 pandemic, numbers of stroke patients admitted to hospitals in different regions of the world decline [
7‐
14]. Our single-center retrospective observational study during COVID-19 pandemic lockdown additionally to stroke patients comprises all ED visits and all ED patients seen by a neurologist. It documents an overall reduced utilization of the ED. It could be shown that total daily ED visits and ED patients seen by a neurologist were more severely reduced than stroke admissions. During the COVID-19 lockdown the University Hospital Düsseldorf as a tertiary center was reorganized for COVID-19 patients with special COVID-19 intensive care unit wards, non-intensive care COVID-19 wards and suspicion of COVID-19 wards. However, stroke care of patients without COVID-19 suspicion was unaffected and not limited. Therefore, we could not recognize structural limitations in our hospital that would explain our observations.
Reasons for a drop in ED visits and stroke admissions might be a consequence of social distancing as suggested by Hoyer et al. in their multicenter study and by Richter et al. in their large nationwide German stroke patient care analysis [
7,
8] or the reduced public transportation and patients’ fear of getting infected with SARS-CoV-2 in the hospital as Zhao et al. [
9] assume in their study. The latter is well in line with reports from the United Kingdom showing that, in contrast to a perceived reduction in the number of hospital admissions, ambulance callouts for stroke and myocardial infarction did not decrease [
15]. The smaller decline in stroke admissions as compared to overall ED visits might be due to the severity of the clinical condition. Interestingly, the reduction seen in our sample was much less pronounced than reductions observed during the first COVID-19 spring lockdowns in Piacenza, Italy (88% reduction of stroke patients presenting to the ED) [
11], in Aragón, Spain (71% reduction of stroke patients) [
10], in a Chinese registry (38% reduction of stroke admissions) [
9], and even smaller than in New Jersey, US with a reduction of daily stroke admissions from 1.82 to 1.13 (38%) [
12]. In contrast, in a further German single-center study the absolute daily number of Code Stroke referrals even remained stable [
16].
These differences might be explained by a less stressed health system and less severe lockdown restrictions in Germany and might fuel discussions about health system reserve capacities and side effects of different lockdown intensities.
Furthermore, during fall “lockdown light” we observed significantly more large artery arteriosclerosis induced ischemic strokes compared to the spring lockdown, which might be primarily due to the small sample size and individual stochastic fluctuation.
In the fall lockdown scenario including also numbers of December 2020 more patients overall and seen by the neurologist presented to the ED compared to spring lockdown, but still significantly less than in 2019. Reasons for higher ED presentations in the fall “lockdown light” might include adaptation processes to the pandemic situation with diminished anxiety and less strict lockdown rules during fall “lockdown light”.
On the other hand, while our IVT rate was stable (23.8% vs 24.3% vs 20.6%), which was in contrast to other observations [
13,
17‐
19], but in line with the nationwide German cohort study [
8], the rate of large vessel occlusion dropped not significantly along with a significant reduction of our EVT rate and absolute number between 2019 and the spring lockdown of EVT by 58 and 62%, respectively. Our observed reduction of EVT is beyond the 21% decline reported from a registry in France [
20] or the 23% decline reported from China [
9]. Stable daily IVT numbers were also reported in another German study [
16], which in contrast to our data also reported stable EVT numbers [
16] indicating regional differences. Furthermore, the large nationwide cohort study with data from 1463 German hospitals found an even higher EVT rate during the spring lockdown compared to prepandemic control periods [
8].
The proximity of our hospital to the district of Heinsberg, which was particularly affected with COVID-19 patients in spring 2020 and borders the area of our thrombectomy service, might be a reason for changed behavior of stroke patients and might have influenced transfer decisions from this area during the spring lockdown.
We cannot exclude individual stochastic fluctuations in patients’ admissions; however, also compared to 2019 the EVT reduction approached 50% in spring lockdown and 37.5% in fall lockdown. In all three periods almost equal numbers of potential EVT candidates did not go to the angiography suite (4 in 2019, 4 in spring lockdown and 3 in fall lockdown). Therefore, we can rule out that in the lockdown periods of 2020 the number of admitted EVT candidates not referred to the angiography suite was lower than in 2019. There may be different explanations for this decline of EVT. In preparation for a presumed influx of COVID-19 patients ED and intensive care capacities had been increased nationwide in part by deferring admission of patients for elective procedures and by enlarging intensive care unit space and facilities. Hence, EVT might have been performed also in hospitals that in non-COVID-19 times would have transferred their patients due to limited ED, interventional or intensive care capacities. Furthermore, the exchange and transfer of patients between hospitals was complicated due to COVID-19 restrictions, possibly preventing the performance of EVT in unclear cases.
On the other hand, we cannot exclude a protective effect of lockdown on stroke incidence by reducing some stress factors in everyday life in analogy to a doubled rate of myocardial infarctions during and normalized rate after watching a soccer game [
21]. Further insight might be gained when analysis of stroke related death rates based on public health data is available.
A non-significant increase of the door to groin puncture time in fall lockdown compared to the other periods is mainly driven by the fact that a smaller number of patients was transferred from other hospitals for EVT (2019: 9 out of 21, spring lockdown: 5 out of 8, fall lockdown: 2 out of 10) in this period. Door to groin puncture time in our hospital is reduced in those patients due to stroke workup already done in the transferring hospital. Patients were then more rapidly transferred from our door to the angiography suite.
In addition, onset to door time in spring as well as in fall lockdown was not significantly extended compared to 2019, which may partly reflect the hesitation of patients to report as fast as possible to the ED in COVID-19 lockdown periods because of infection fear.
Our report has several limitations. We conducted a retrospective single-center study in a short time frame resulting in limited numbers of patients analyzed. However, as restrictions are ongoing and decisions on lockdown rules are currently discussed, we believe these data can offer useful information. In addition, we used data from our electronic patient files. Patients in the ED have been marked by the treating neurologist in the electronic patient files on a daily routine. Therefore, we do not expect a relevant amount of data missing. Furthermore, there are patients who had been discharged or transferred from the ED to other hospitals and could not be included in further analysis. In addition, long-term survival and long-term outcomes are not reported.
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