# Striving toward quality metrics for pediatric stroke: time from door to diagnosis

**Authors:** Rachel Pearson, Nancy K. Hills, Kellie Bacon, Shelby K. Shelton, Rowena Roque, Tatiana Moreno, Maria Kuchherzki, Carl Schultz, Theodore W. Heyming, Christine K. Fox, Heather J. Fullerton

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fstro.2025.1718355 · Frontiers in Stroke · 2026-01-07

## TL;DR

This study examines delays in diagnosing pediatric stroke and highlights the need for faster MRI access and better prehospital stroke recognition.

## Contribution

The paper introduces the concept of 'door to diagnosis' time as a potential quality metric for pediatric stroke care.

## Key findings

- MRI acquisition times were significantly longer compared to CT for pediatric stroke patients.
- EMS providers rarely suspected stroke, but when they did, it strongly influenced imaging decisions.
- ED walk-ins experienced longer delays in receiving CT and MRI compared to EMS patients.

## Abstract

Most pediatric stroke survivors suffer long-term impairments. To minimize injury, it is essential to quickly restore perfusion to viable brain tissue. Minimizing the time to stroke diagnosis requires recognition of a possible stroke by prehospital and emergency healthcare personnel, and rapid neuroimaging. While CT suffices for diagnosing hemorrhagic stroke, MRI is necessary to diagnose acute ischemic stroke (IS), contributing to significant diagnostic delays and potentially missed opportunities for intervention.

We conducted a retrospective study of children 1–14 years old with acute neurological symptoms presenting by Emergency Medical Services (EMS) to the study institution from 1/2019–6/2023. We described patient characteristics and neuroimaging studies, then evaluated predictors of MRI acquisition and actionable findings, including stroke. To assess the generalizability of these data we analyzed a secondary retrospective cohort of all children admitted during this period with out-of-hospital strokes regardless of presentation modality [EMS, emergency department (ED) walk-in, and transfer].

Among 3,888 pediatric patients with acute neurological symptoms presenting via EMS, 695 (17.9%) had neuroimaging: CT only in 570 patients (14.7%); CT and MRI in 125 (3.2%). Median (IQR) times from EMS activation to neuroimaging were 2.29 (1.56, 3.21) hours for CT and 26.8 (16.3, 43.8) hours for MRI. An EMS primary impression of “stroke” was rare (n = 13) but strongly predictive of imaging acquisition: all had CT and 11 had MRI. Thirty-one of the 125 patients with MRI had actionable MRIs, including nine acute strokes. During the study period another 14 stroke patients presented as ED walk-ins. Median time from ED arrival to CT was 0.92 (0.47, 1.08) hours for EMS patients with hemorrhagic stroke and 5.69 (1.50, 9.76) hours for walk-ins; for MRI, median time was 4.15 (3.00, 5.31) hours for EMS patients with ischemic stroke and 10.2 (1.99, 36.3) hours for walk-ins.

Among children with acute neurological symptoms selected for neuroimaging, CT was the most common modality while MRIs were performed with a substantial time delay. While EMS providers rarely suspected stroke, their diagnosis impacted imaging decisions in the ED, suggesting a need to raise awareness among prehospital providers. To measure quality improvement in pediatric stroke, new pediatric-specific metrics like “door to diagnosis” time, should be further explored.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** stroke (MONDO:0005098)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** hemorrhagic stroke (MESH:D000083302), IS (MESH:D002544), stroke (MESH:D020521), acute neurological symptoms (MESH:D040701)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12802760/full.md

## References

35 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12802760/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12802760