Neurological Research, 2026 (SCI-Expanded, Scopus)
Background: Stroke remains a leading cause of mortality and long-term disability in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. The substantial burden of stroke in low- and middle-income countries, where 75% of stroke-related deaths and 81% of disability-adjusted life years occur, underscores the critical need for region-specific adaptations of acute stroke care guidelines to address critical regional challenges while maintaining evidence-based core principles of care. Methods: We adapted evidence from multiple international guidelines (AHA/ASA 2019–2023, ESO 2021–2023, NICE 2019–2022, Chinese Stroke Association 2022) and recent meta-analyses using MENA-SINO’s systematic seven-step framework including comprehensive evidence review, multidisciplinary expert panel input from 45 experts across 22 MENA countries, regional implementation barrier assessment, and formal modified Delphi consensus procedures achieving > 85% agreement. Recommendations employ modified Class of Recommendation, Level of Evidence, Resource-Limited designations, and Expert Opinion statements following AGREE II standards. Key Recommendations: Our regional roadmap emphasizes ten cornerstone concepts: (1) tiered stroke care systems with telemedicine networks; (2) rapid reperfusion protocols for IV thrombolysis within 4.5 hours and mechanical thrombectomy within 6–24 hours based on imaging; (3) resource-stratified care; (4) culturally sensitive decision-making frameworks; (5) aggressive secondary prevention targeting regional risk factor patterns; (6) standardized quality metrics across diverse systems; (7) comprehensive workforce development programs; (8) appropriate technology integration; (9) region-specific emergency response systems;and (10) sustainable phased implementation strategies. Conclusion: These guidelines provide the first comprehensive, resource-stratified framework for acute ischemic stroke management across the MENA region, with practical adaptations addressing diverse healthcare settings while preserving essential evidence-based care components.