CEA2 scale predicts anterior circulation LVO stroke in Chinese community hospitals
A retrospective analysis of a prospectively collected acute ischemic stroke patient database (STRESS registry) aimed to develop a simple scale to predict acute anterior circulation large vessel occlusion (LVO) strokes for community hospitals in China. From 1,196 screened patients, 722 were included in the study, with 406 in the derivation cohort and 316 in the validation cohort. Multivariable logistic regression in the derivation cohort identified four factors significantly associated with acute anterior circulation LVO stroke: gaze deviation (OR: 5.66, 95% CI: 2.79–11.50), motor arm weakness (OR: 4.17, 95% CI: 1.17–14.87), atrial fibrillation (OR: 4.10, 95% CI: 2.12–7.90), and level of consciousness (OR: 3.76, 95% CI: 1.56–9.04). These items formed the four-item Community Hospitals Stroke Scale (CEA2: Consciousness, Eye gaze, Arm weakness, Atrial fibrillation). In the validation cohort, a CEA2 score ≥2 demonstrated the following performance for predicting anterior circulation LVO strokes: Youden index 0.722, sensitivity 0.878 (95% CI 0.818–0.921), specificity 0.844 (95% CI 0.745–0.865), positive predictive value 0.846 (95% CI 0.755–0.871), negative predictive value 0.876 (95% CI 0.809–0.917), and accuracy 0.861 (95% CI 0.801–0.881). Further analysis in the validation cohort showed that when the CEA2 score (including atrial fibrillation) was ≥2, the performance for predicting a cardiogenic embolism etiology was: sensitivity 0.792 (95% CI 0.722–0.850), specificity 0.849 (95% CI 0.785–0.899), and accuracy 0.821 (95% CI 0.773–0.862). The study concludes the CEA2 scale may be a simple and effective tool for identifying anterior circulation LVO strokes and providing relevant etiology information in this setting.