| Literature DB >> 21794121 |
David M Kent1, David E Thaler.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite the diffusion into practice of percutaneous closure of a patent foramen ovale (PFO) in patients with cryptogenic stroke (CS), the benefits have not been demonstrated, and remain unclear. For any individual presenting with a PFO in the setting of CS, it is not clear whether the PFO is pathogenically-related to the index event or an incidental finding. Further, the overall rate of stroke recurrence is low in patients with CS and PFO. How patient-specific factors affect the likelihood that a discovered PFO is related to an index stroke or affect the risk of recurrence is not well understood. These probabilities are likely to be important determinants of the benefits of PFO closure in CS. DESIGN/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21794121 PMCID: PMC3170216 DOI: 10.1186/1745-6215-12-185
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Figure 1PFO Propensity and the Probability that a Stroke is PFO-attributable. We define PFO propensity as the probability of finding a PFO in a patient, based on patient-specific characteristics (such as age and the presence or absence of hypertension, diabetes and hypercholesterolemia). Through Bayes' theorem, it is directly (though non-linearly) related to the probability that a cryptogenic stroke is PFO-attributable (in patients with both cryptogenic stroke and PFO).
Figure 2Summary of RoPE Study. Schematic summary of the Risk of Paradoxical Embolism (RoPE) Study.
RoPE Database
| Database | # of subjects | # w/PFO | # w/o PFO | RoPE Investigator |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| APRIS [ | 83 | 17 | 66 | Marco DiTullio |
| Bern (published) [ | 159 | 159 | - | Krassen Nedeltchev |
| Bern (unpublished) | 249 | 249 | - | Heinrich Mattle |
| CODICIA [ | 486 | 266 | 240 | Joaquin Serena |
| PFO-ASA Study [ | 581 | 267 | 314 | Jean-Louis Mas |
| German Study [ | 1126 | 389 | 737 | Christian Weimar |
| Lausanne | 172 | 93 | 79 | Patrik Michel |
| NOMASS [ | 60 | 23 | 37 | Mitchell Elkind |
| PICSS [ | 250 | 98 | 152 | Shunichi Homma |
| Sapienza (unpublished) | 343 | 133 | 210 | Emanuele Di Angelantonio |
| Federica Papetti | ||||
| Toronto [ | 114 | 114 | - | Cheryl Jaigobin |
| Tufts | 140 | 140 | - | David Thaler |
| Total Estimates* | 2546 | 1484 | 1062 |
Initial RoPE Variables of Interest
| Variable Type | Variable |
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| Age | |
| Gender | |
| Race | |
| History of the following (prior to index stroke) | |
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| Antithrombotic medications after index event | |
| Outcome: National Institutes of Health Stroke Severity Score | |
| Hypermobility of interatrial septum ("ASA") | |
| Interatrial shunting at rest (e.g. not during Valsalva maneuvers) | |
| Volume of interatrial shunt (e.g. max. bubbles in left atrium) | |
| Anatomical PFO size | |
| Spontaneous Doppler flow seen on color | |
| MRI/CT findings of cerebral infarct: yes/no (at index stroke) | |
| Number of prior cerebral infarcts | |
| Anatomical location of index and prior infarct(s) | |