Data#
Data access#
Data was obtained from the Sentinel Stroke National Audit (SSNAP [1]), managed through the Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership (HQIP [2]). SSNAP has near-complete coverage of all acute stroke admissions in the UK (outside Scotland). All hospitals admitting acute stroke participate in the audit, and year-on-year comparison with Hospital Episode Statistics [3] confirms estimated case ascertainment of 95% of coded cases of acute stroke.
The NHS Health Research Authority decision tool [4] was used to confirm that ethical approval was not required to access the data. Data access was authorised by HQIP (reference HQIP303).
Data was retrieved for 246,676 emergency stroke admissions to acute stroke teams in England and Wales between 2016 and 2018 (three full years).
[1] https://www.strokeaudit.org/
[2] https://www.hqip.org.uk/
[3] https://digital.nhs.uk/data-and-information/data-tools-and-services/data-services/hospital-episode-statistics
[4] http://www.hra-decisiontools.org.uk/research/
Data Fields#
Stroke Team#
StrokeTeam: Pseudonymised SSNAP ‘routinely admitting team‘ unique identifier. For emergency care it is expected that each hospital has one stroke team (though post-72 hour care may be reported under a different team at that hospital).PatientUID: Pseudonymised patient unique identifier
Patient – general#
Pathway: Total number of team transfers, excluding community teams
S1AgeOnArrival: Age on arrival aggregated to 5 year bands
MoreEqual80y: Whether the patient is >= 80 years old at the moment of the stroke
S1Gender: Gender
S1Ethnicity: Patient Ethnicity. Aggregated to White, Black, Mixed, Asian and Other
Patient – pathway information#
S1OnsetInHospital: Whether the patient was already an inpatient at the time of stroke
S1OnsetToArrival_min: Time from symptom onset to arrival at hospital in minutes, where known and if out of hospital stroke
S1OnsetDateType: Whether the date of onset given is precise, best estimate or if the stroke occurred while sleep
S1OnsetTimeType: Whether the time of symptom onset given is precise, best estimate, not known
S1ArriveByAmbulance: Whether the patient arrived by ambulance
S1AdmissionHour: Hour of arrival, aggregates to 3 hour epochs
S1AdmissionDay: Day of week at the moment of admission
S1AdmissionQuarter: Year quarter (Q1: Jan-Mar; Q2:April-Jun; Q3: Jul-Sept; Q4: Oct-Dec)
S1AdmissionYear: Year of admission
S2BrainImagingTime_min: Time from Clock Start to brain scan. In minutes. “Clock Start” is used throughout SSNAP reporting to refer to the date and time of arrival at first hospital for newly arrived patients, or to the date and time of symptom onset if patient already in hospital at the time of their stroke.
S2ThrombolysisTime_min: Time from Clock Start to thrombolysis. In minutes. “Clock Start” is used throughout SSNAP reporting to refer to the date and time of arrival at first hospital for newly arrived patients, or to the date and time of symptom onset if patient already in hospital at the time of their stroke.
Patient – comorbidities#
CongestiveHeartFailure: Pre-Stroke Congestive Heart Failure
Hypertension: Pre-Stroke Systemic Hypertension
AtrialFibrillation: Pre-Stroke Atrial Fibrillation (persistent, permanent, or paroxysmal)
Diabetes: Comorbidities: Pre-Stroke Diabetes Mellitus
StrokeTIA: Pre-Stroke history of stroke or Transient Ischaemic Attack (TIA)
AFAntiplatelet: Only available if “Yes” to Atrial Fibrillation comorbidity. Whether the patient was on antiplatelet medication prior to admission
AFAnticoagulent: Prior to 01-Dec-2017: Only available if “Yes” to Atrial Fibrillation comorbidity; From 01-Dec-2017: available even if patient is not in Atrial Fibrillation prior to admission. Whether the patient was on anticoagulant medication prior to admission
AFAnticoagulentVitK: If the patient was receiving anticoagulant medication, was it vitamin K antagonists
AFAnticoagulentDOAC: If the patient was receiving anticoagulant medication, was it direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs)
AFAnticoagulentHeparin: If the patient was receiving anticoagulant medication, was it Heparin
Patient – NIH Stroke Scale#
S2NihssArrival: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score on arrival at hospital
BestGaze: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale Item 2 Best Gaze (higher values indicate more severe deficit)
BestLanguage: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale Item 9 Best Language (higher values indicate more severe deficit)
Dysarthria: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale Item 10 Dysarthria (higher values indicate more severe deficit)
ExtinctionInattention: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale Item 11 Extinction and Inattention (higher values indicate more severe deficit)
FacialPalsy: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale Item 4 Facial Paresis (higher values indicate more severe deficit)
LimbAtaxia: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale Item 7 Limb Ataxia (higher values indicate more severe deficit)
Loc: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale Item 1a Level of Consciousness (higher values indicate more severe deficit)
LocCommands: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale Item 1c Level of Consciousness Commands (higher values indicate more severe deficit)
LocQuestions: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale Item 1b Level of Consciousness Questions (higher values indicate more severe deficit)
MotorArmLeft: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale Item 5a Motor Arm - Left (higher values indicate more severe deficit)
MotorArmRight: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale Item 5b Motor Arm - Right (higher values indicate more severe deficit)
MotorLegLeft: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale Item 6a Motor Leg - Left (higher values indicate more severe deficit)
MotorLegRight: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale Item 6b Motor Leg - Right (higher values indicate more severe deficit)
Sensory: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale Item 8 Sensory (higher values indicate more severe deficit)
Visual: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale Item 3 Visual Fields (higher values indicate more severe deficit)
Patient – other clinical features#
S2INR: Patient’s International Normalised ratio (INR) on arrival at hospital (available since 01-Dec-2017)
S2INRHigh: INR was greater than 10 on arrival at hospital (available since 01-Dec-2017)
S2INRNK: INR not checked (available since 01-Dec-2017)
S2NewAFDiagnosis: Whether a new diagnosis of Atrial Fibrillation was made on admission
S2RankinBeforeStroke: Patient’s modified Rankin Scale score before this stroke (Higher values indicate more disability)
S2StrokeType: Whether the stroke type was infarction or primary intracerebral haemorrhage
S2TIAInLastMonth: Whether the patient had a Transient Ischaemic Attack during the last month. Item from the SSNAP comprehensive dataset questions (not mandatory)
Patient – thrombolysis given#
S2Thrombolysis: Whether the patient was given thrombolysis (clot busting medication)
Patient – reason stated for not giving thrombolysis#
Age: If the answer to thrombolysis given was “no but”, the reason was Age
Comorbidity: If the answer to thrombolysis given was “no but”, the reason was Co-morbidity
Haemorrhagic: If the answer to thrombolysis given was “no but”, the reason was Haemorrhagic stroke
Improving: If the answer to thrombolysis given was “no but”, the reason was Symptoms Improving
Medication: If the answer to thrombolysis given was “no but”, the reason was Medication
OtherMedical: If the answer to thrombolysis given was “no but”, the reason was Other medical reason
Refusal: If the answer to thrombolysis given was “no but”, the reason was Refusal
TimeUnknownWakeUp: If the answer to thrombolysis given was “no but”, the reason was Symptom onset time unknown/wake-up stroke
TimeWindow: If the answer to thrombolysis given was “no but”, the reason was Age
TooMildSevere: If the answer to thrombolysis given was “no but”, the reason was Stroke too mild or too severe