National Stroke Association guidelines for the management of transient ischemic attacks

Author(s): Johnston SC, Nguyen-Huynh MN, Schwarz ME, Fuller K, Williams CE, et al.

Abstract

Objective:Transient ischemic attacks are common and important harbingers of subsequent stroke. Management varies widely, and most published guidelines have not been updated in several years. We sought to create comprehensive, unbiased, evidence-based guidelines for the management of patients with transient ischemic attacks.

Methods:Fifteen expert panelists were selected based on objective criteria, using publication metrics that predicted nomination by practitioners in the field. Prior published guidelines were identified through systematic review, and recommendations derived from them were rated independently for quality by the experts. Highest quality recommendations were selected and subsequently edited by the panelists using a modified Delphi approach with multiple iterations of questionnaires to reach consensus on new changes. Experts were provided systematic reviews of recent clinical studies and were asked to justify wording changes based on new evidence and to rate the final recommendations based on level of evidence and quality. No expert was allowed to contribute to recommendations on a topic for which there could be any perception of a conflict of interest.

Results:Of 257 guidelines documents identified by systematic review, 13 documents containing 137 recommendations met all entry criteria. Six iterations of questionnaires were required to reach consensus on wording of 53 final recommendations. Final recommendations covered initial management, evaluation, medical treatment, surgical treatment, and risk factor management.

Interpretation:The final recommendations on the care of patients with transient ischemic attacks emphasize the importance of urgent evaluation and treatment. The novel approach used to develop these guidelines is feasible, allows for rapid updating, and may reduce bias.

Similar Articles

Prognosis of transient ischemic attacks in the Oxfordshire Community Stroke Project

Author(s): Dennis M, Bamford J, Sandercock P, Warlow C

Short-term prognosis after emergency department diagnosis of TIA

Author(s): Johnston SC, Gress DR, Browner WS, Sidney S

Transient ischemic attacks in rural and urban northern Portugal: incidence and short-term prognosis

Author(s): Correia M, Silva MR, Magalhães R, Guimarães L, Silva MC

Stroke-unit care for acute stroke patients: an observational follow-up study

Author(s): Candelise L, Gattinoni M, Bersano A, Micieli G, Sterzi R, et al.

Guidelines for management of ischaemic stroke and transient ischaemic attack 2008

Author(s): European Stroke Organisation (ESO) Executive Committee; ESO Writing Committee

Diagnosis of transient ischemic attack by the nonneurologist

Author(s): Ferro JM, Falcão I, Rodrigues G, Canhão P, Melo TP, et al.

A prospective cohort study of patients with transient ischemic attack to identify high-risk clinical characteristics

Author(s): Perry JJ, Sharma M, Sivilotti ML, Sutherland J, Worster A, et al.

TIA triage in emergency department using acute MRI (TIA-TEAM): A feasibility and safety study

Author(s): Vora N, Tung CE, Mlynash M, Garcia M, Kemp S, et al.

In-hospital initiation of secondary stroke prevention therapies yields high rates of adherence at follow-up

Author(s): Ovbiagele B, Saver JL, Fredieu A, Suzuki S, Selco S, et al.

Trends over time in the risk of stroke after an incident transient ischemic attack

Author(s): Sundararajan V, Thrift AG, Phan TG, Choi PM, Clissold B, et al.