0 468

Cited 82 times in

Brain microbleeds, anticoagulation, and hemorrhage risk: Meta-analysis in stroke patients with AF.

Authors
 Andreas Charidimou  ;  Christopher Karayiannis  ;  Tae-Jin Song  ;  Dilek Necioglu Orken  ;  Vincent Thijs  ;  Robin Lemmens  ;  Jinkwon Kim  ;  Su Mei Goh  ;  Thanh G. Phan  ;  Cathy Soufan  ;  Ronil V. Chandra  ;  Lee-Anne Slater  ;  Shamir Haji  ;  Vincent Mok  ;  Solveig Horstmann  ;  Kam Tat Leung  ;  Yuichiro Kawamura, Nobuyuki Sato  ;  Naoyuki Hasebe  ;  Tsukasa Saito  ;  Lawrence K.S. Wong  ;  Yannie Soo  ;  Roland Veltkamp  ;  Kelly  ;  D. Flemming  ;  Toshio Imaizumi  ;  Velandai Srikanth  ;  Ji Hoe Heo 
Citation
 NEUROLOGY, Vol.89(23) : 2317-2326, 2017 
Journal Title
NEUROLOGY
ISSN
 0028-3878 
Issue Date
2017
MeSH
Anticoagulants/adverse effects ; Anticoagulants/therapeutic use ; Atrial Fibrillation/complications ; Atrial Fibrillation/drug therapy ; Cerebral Hemorrhage/chemically induced ; Cerebral Hemorrhage/complications ; Cerebral Hemorrhage/epidemiology ; Cohort Studies ; Humans ; Risk Factors ; Stroke/complications ; Stroke/epidemiology
Abstract
OBJECTIVES:

To assess the association between cerebral microbleeds (CMBs) and future spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) risk in ischemic stroke patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation (AF) taking oral anticoagulants.

METHODS:

This was a meta-analysis of cohort studies with >50 patients with recent ischemic stroke and documented AF, brain MRI at baseline, long-term oral anticoagulation treatment, and ≥6 months of follow-up. Authors provided summary-level data on stroke outcomes stratified by CMB status. We estimated pooled annualized ICH and ischemic stroke rates from Poisson regression. We calculated odds ratios (ORs) of ICH by CMB presence/absence, ≥5 CMBs, and CMB topography (strictly lobar, mixed, and strictly deep) using random-effects models.

RESULTS:

We established an international collaboration and pooled data from 8 centers including 1,552 patients. The crude CMB prevalence was 30% and 7% for ≥5 CMBs. Baseline CMB presence (vs no CMB) was associated with ICH during follow-up (OR 2.68, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.19-6.01, p = 0.017). Presence of ≥5 CMB was related to higher future ICH risk (OR 5.50, 95% CI 2.07-14.66, p = 0.001). The pooled annual ICH incidence increased from 0.30% (95% CI 0.04-0.55) among CMB-negative patients to 0.81% (95% CI 0.17-1.45) in CMB-positive patients (p = 0.01) and 2.48% (95% CI 1.2-6.2) in patients with ≥5 CMBs (p = 0.001). There was no association between CMBs and recurrent ischemic stroke.

CONCLUSIONS:

The presence of CMB on MRI and the dichotomized cutoff of ≥5 CMBs might identify subgroups of ischemic stroke patients with AF with high ICH risk and after further validation could help in risk stratification, in anticoagulation decisions, and in guiding randomized trials and ongoing large observational studies.

© 2017 American Academy of Neurology.
Full Text
http://n.neurology.org/content/89/23/2317
DOI
10.1212/WNL.0000000000004704
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Neurology (신경과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Heo, Ji Hoe(허지회) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9898-3321
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/161607
사서에게 알리기
  feedback

qrcode

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Browse

Links