For someone having a major stroke, time is brain tissue. The standard process involves a CT scan to confirm the blockage before a patient is taken for a procedure to remove it. This trial asked a critical question: what if we skip that scan and take patients straight to the treatment room to save precious minutes?
The study involved 115 adults in France who showed clear signs of a severe stroke from a large blocked artery. They were randomly assigned to either go directly to the angiography suite for treatment or to follow the conventional path of imaging first. The main goal was to see how many people could live independently 90 days later.
The results were sobering. Rushing patients directly did not lead to more people regaining their independence. In fact, 36% in the direct-transfer group achieved this, compared to 42% in the conventional group—a difference that wasn't statistically significant. More concerning was the safety signal: patients taken directly had a higher rate of serious bleeding in the brain. Because of this safety worry, the trial was stopped early.
It's crucial to understand the limits of this finding. The study was small and ended prematurely, so we can't draw firm conclusions. The increased bleeding risk is a red flag that needs much more investigation. This doesn't mean the fast-track idea is dead, but it strongly suggests that skipping steps might come with unforeseen dangers that outweigh any potential time saved.