Orv Hetil. 2026 Jul 19;167(29):1131-1141. doi: 10.1556/650.2026.33600. Print 2026 Jul 19.
ABSTRACT
Acute ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke are among the leading causes of mortality and long-term disability worldwide. In addition to the results of randomized clinical trials, registry data reflecting real-world clinical practice play a key role in evaluating the quality of care. The STROKE platform of the Translational Neuroscience National Laboratory provides a comprehensive overview of the patient population treated at a Hungarian comprehensive stroke center. Our objective was to characterize the STROKE platform and summarize the findings of studies based on its data, to synthesize the main clinical and methodological conclusions, and to present its implications for quality improvement in Hungarian stroke care. The platform is based on standardized data collection of patients admitted to the Department of Neurology or Neurosurgery, University of Pécs within 24 hours due to acute ischemic stroke, transient ischemic attack, or hemorrhagic stroke. Demographic, clinical, imaging, laboratory, therapeutic, and 90-day outcome data were recorded. Outcomes were analyzed using multivariable linear and logistic regression models, propensity score matching, and comprehensive machine learning methods. Based on the platform, 77.0% of admitted patients had ischemic stroke, 16.9% transient ischemic attack, and 6.1% hemorrhagic stroke; the mean age was 72.0 ± 12.5 years. Among patients with ischemic stroke, 62.4% received recanalization therapy. The strongest independent predictors of 90-day functional outcome were neurological status at admission, premorbid functional status, extent of early ischemia, and age. The Stroke-SCORE, based on three parameters (age, premorbid status and neurological deficit), demonstrated strong predictive performance for 90-day outcome (area under the curve = 0.86). In patients undergoing reperfusion therapy, door-to-needle time <60 minutes and door-to-groin time <120 minutes were significantly associated with more favorable outcomes. After multivariable adjustment, neither anticoagulant nor antiplatelet therapy proved to be an independent adverse prognostic factor. The STROKE platform confirms that functional outcome is primarily determined by stroke severity, premorbid status, age, extent of ischemia, and timely, well-organized reperfusion care. Real-world data analyzed with advanced statistical methods substantially contribute to clinical decision-making, the reassessment of contraindications, and quality improvement in Hungarian stroke care. Orv Hetil. 2026; 167(29): 1131-1141.
PMID:42472441 | DOI:10.1556/650.2026.33600