RACE score calculation associates with stroke differentiation and large vessel occlusion identification in emergency department cohort
This retrospective observational study evaluated 303 consecutive adult patients through an emergency department stroke activation pathway. The population included 133 stroke patients and 170 stroke mimic patients. Mean age was 69.13 ± 12.59 years for stroke patients compared to 61.67 ± 17.72 years for mimics with p = 0.001.
Mean RACE scores were significantly higher in stroke patients than in stroke mimics at 3.15 ± 2.62 versus 1.64 ± 1.91 with p less than 0.001. RACE scores greater than or equal to 5 were more frequent in stroke cases at 30.8% versus 8.8% with p less than 0.001. LVO was identified in 46 patients representing 15.4% of the cohort.
Patients with LVO had significantly higher RACE scores than those without LVO at 4.59 ± 2.63 versus 1.85 ± 2.03 with p less than 0.001. 56.5% of LVO cases had RACE scores greater than or equal to 5. Higher RACE scores were significantly associated with the presence of LVO with an OR of 1.59 and 95% CI 1.38 to 1.83 with p less than 0.001.
No adverse events or serious adverse events were reported. The study reports association, not causation. The RACE score may provide clinically useful information for differentiating stroke from stroke mimics during emergency department evaluations and may serve as a practical adjunct to bedside neurological assessment within acute stroke workflows.