Literature DB >> 31071137

The cardiac diagnostic work-up in stroke patients-A subanalysis of the Find-AFRANDOMISED trial.

Katrin Wasser1, Mark Weber-Krüger2, Falko Jürries2, Jan Liman1, Gerhard F Hamann3, Pawel Kermer4, Timo Uphaus5, Evgeny Protsenko4, Joachim Seegers6, Meinhard Mende7, Klaus Gröschel5, Rolf Wachter2,8,9.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The cardiac diagnostic workup of stroke patients, especially the value of echocardiography and enhanced and prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring, is still a matter of debate. We aimed to analyse the impact of pathologies detected by echocardiography and ECG monitoring on therapeutic decisions and prognosis.
METHODS: Find-AFRANDOMISED was a prospective multicenter study which randomised 398 acute ischemic stroke patients ≥ 60 years to enhanced and prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring or usual stroke unit care. This substudy compared therapeutic consequences of echocardiography and routine Holter-ECG or enhanced and prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring, respectively, and prognosis of patients with or without pathologic findings in echocardiography or Holter-ECG monitoring.
RESULTS: 50.3% received enhanced and prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring and 49.7% routine ECG monitoring. 82.9% underwent transthoracic echocardiography (TTE), 38.9% transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) and 25.6% both procedures. 14/89 TEE pathologies and 1/90 TTE pathology led to a change in therapy, resulting in a number needed to change decision (NNCD) of 12 and 330 (p < 0.001), respectively. In comparison, enhanced and prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring found atrial fibrillation (AF) in 27 of 200 patients, and routine ECG monitoring in twelve of 198 patients, leading to therapeutic changes in all patients (NNCD 8 and 17, respectively, p < 0.001).
CONCLUSIONS: Most changes in therapeutic decisions were triggered by enhanced and prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring, which should therefore play a more prominent role in future guidelines. Echocardiography identifies a patient group at high cardiovascular risk, but rarely result in therapeutic changes. Whether this patient group requires further cardiovascular workup remains unknown. This should be further investigated by interdisciplinary neurocardiologic teams and in appropriate future trials. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01855035.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31071137      PMCID: PMC6508702          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0216530

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


Introduction

Ischemic stroke is one of the most common causes of disability and death worldwide and the 5-year-recurrence rate after a first brain ischemia is up to 30% [1]. Therefore, a careful diagnostic workup is needed to exclude potential stroke mechanisms that may result in therapeutic changes. The American Heart Association/American Stroke Association (AHA/ASA) and the European Stroke Organisation (ESO) agree on a standard of care, which includes continuous monitoring of vital parameters and neurologic status, systematic laboratory testing, cerebral imaging, extra- and transcranial Doppler and duplex sonography, 12-lead ECG and a minimum of 24-hour ECG-monitoring [2,3]. These recommendations of a relatively short period of ECG monitoring of these two most cited guidelines are in contrast to the well-documented fact that enhanced and prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring significantly improves the detection rate of paroxysmal AF [4-6], which is of crucial importance as it usually shifts the secondary prevention therapy from antiplatelet drugs to oral anticoagulation (OAC) that is known to reduce the stroke risk by up to 64% on an intention-to treat basis [7]. In contrast, the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) and a consensus document of German cardiologists and neurologists recommend a duration of > 72 hours for Holter-ECG monitoring after acute ischemic stroke [8,9]. It is uncontroversial that echocardiography can detect many potential cardiac sources of embolism such as left atrial thrombus, patent foramen ovale, atrial septum aneurysm, valvular or myocardial disease, endocarditis or cardiac tumors amongst others. Furthermore, it can reveal other cardiac pathologies of potential therapeutic consequences such as wall motion abnormalities or a reduced left ventricular function which potentially demands a change in cardiologic therapy. Despite the fact that echocardiography can provide useful information, the indication and optimal echocardiographic approach in the cardiac workup of ischemic stroke are still unclear and not specifically addressed in current AHA/ASA guidelines [3,10]. The criteria for stroke unit certification by European Stroke Organisation (ESO) and German Stroke Society (DSG) have required the availability of TTE and TEE [11]. TTE is generally available, non-invasive, less personnel-intensive and cheap, whereas TEE is superior for evaluation of the aortic arch, left atrium, and atrial septum [12-14]. Therefore, DSG demands a minimum rate of 15% TEE of all stroke unit patients [15]. Potential therapeutic consequences of pathologic echocardiographic findings vary from conservative therapies such as OAC or antibiotics to percutaneous coronary or surgical intervention according to current guidelines. But the net clinical benefit of TEE in stroke patients (i.e. how often does TEE lead to a change in therapeutic management) is still unknown. Current literature investigated mostly only the impact of echocardiographic pathologies in subgroups of stroke like cryptogenic stroke or ESUS [16,17]. Accordingly, there are no specific recommendations for the use of echocardiography in other stroke subgroups in current guidelines [3,10]. Most therapeutic strategies mentioned in guidelines are only limited to the treatment of cardiac sources of embolism and there is a lack of clear strategies for the treatment of pathologies that are not directly linked to stroke, Therefore, therapeutic decisions based on echocardiographic findings in stroke patients often seem to underlie local in-house policies or are reduced to the treatment of pathologies that are directly linked to stroke like cardiac sources of embolism, instead of treating all pathologies that affect the well-being and survival or simply the prognosis of stroke patients. In this subanalysis of the Find-AFRANDOMISED trial we aimed to analyse the impact of pathologies detected by echocardiography and ECG monitoring on therapeutic decisions and prognosis. We therefore investigated the number and types of pathologies detected by TTE or TEE, routine or enhanced and prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring and analysed how often these findings led to changes in neurologic or cardiologic therapeutic decisions. In addition, we evaluated whether abnormal findings in both modalities (echocardiography and Holter-ECG monitoring) may predict a worse prognosis represented by an increased one-year mortality in comparison to patients without pathologies in echocardiography or routine Holter-ECG or enhanced and prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring, respectively.

Methods

Study design and patient population

The local ethics committees (Göttingen, Mainz, Wiesbaden and Sanderbusch, Germany) approved the protocol of the Find-AFRANDOMISED trial and all patients gave written informed consent. Find-AFRANDOMISED was an investigator-initiated prospective, randomised, controlled, open-label multicenter study that has been described in detail, recently (S1 Fig) [4,16]. In brief, we included patients ≥ 60 years with acute ischemic stroke irrespective of the stroke aetiology. Exclusion criteria were a history or presence of AF, an ipsilateral carotid artery stenosis ≥ 50% according to NASCET and an indication or contraindication for OAC. Within seven days after an acute ischemic stroke, patients were admitted to a certified stroke unit and received the routine aetiologic stroke workup including transthoracic and/or transesophageal echocardiography according to local in-house policies. Patients were either randomised to 30 total days of Holter-ECG-monitoring (10 days at randomization, after three and after six months) or standard-of-care monitoring with 24-hour Holter- and/or telemetry ECG according to local stroke unit protocols. All AF episodes were adjudicated by a blinded endpoint committee and AF was defined as at least one episode ≥ 30 seconds duration [6]. Furthermore, all ECGs were screened for potential pacemaker indications, e.g. high-grade atrioventricular blocks or extreme bradycardia amongst others. After randomisation to the two ECG groups almost all study patients received either transthoracic or transesophageal echocardiography or both. The type of echocardiography was chosen according to local in-house policies. Echocardiography was performed by investigators with ≥ 2 years of experience according to the current guideline for the use of echocardiography in the evaluation of a cardiac source of embolism [17]. The echocardiographers did not participate in any study specific training and used classifications according to local standards. Pathologic echocardiographic findings, which typically lead to a therapeutic consequence for patients, were a priori determined by an expert panel of cardiologists (R.W. and M. W.-K.). High-risk sources according to the TOAST classification were left atrial (appendage) and ventricular thrombus, myxoma and endocarditis. Medium-risk sources were patent foramen ovale (PFO) and atrial septal aneurysm (ASA) [18]. Other echocardiographic findings considered to be relevant were other severe valve diseases, ventricular or aortic aneurysm, aortic plaques, impaired left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) and wall motion abnormalities (Table 1). All pathologies were prospectively recorded into a predefined case report form (CRF). Potential therapeutic consequences such as OAC, interventions or operations were assessed during the clinical follow-ups after three, six and twelve months. Furthermore, adverse events, hospital admissions, diseases, and medication were recorded.
Table 1

Echocardiographic pathologies and potential therapeutic consequences.

pathologynumber of patients (TTE)number of patients (TEE)potential therapeutic consequencesnumber of patients treatedtherapy decision based on TTEtherapy decision based on TEE
LA thrombus1N/A0OAC000
LAA thrombus1N/A1OAC101
LV thrombus10N/AOAC000
LV aneurysm21N/AOAC000
Myxoma1N/A1Operation000
Endocarditis1N/A0Operation000
Antibiotics000
PFO and/or ASA2N/A40OAC909
PFO closure101
Aortic aneurysm213Operation000
Aortic plaques2034OAC101
Severe valve insufficiency*10Operation000
Intervention000
Severe valve stenosis°220Operation110
Intervention000
Valve thrombosis102OAC101
Operation101
LVEF < 50%27N/APCI000
Bypass000
Hypo- and/or akinesia44N/APCI000
Bypass000

1 = high-risk sources of cardioembolism

2 = medium-risk sources of cardioembolism

LA = left atrium, LAA = left atrial appendage, LV = left ventricle

* Tricuspid valve insufficiency

° aortic valve stenosis

N/A = not applicable, PCI = percutaneous coronary intervention

1 = high-risk sources of cardioembolism 2 = medium-risk sources of cardioembolism LA = left atrium, LAA = left atrial appendage, LV = left ventricle * Tricuspid valve insufficiency ° aortic valve stenosis N/A = not applicable, PCI = percutaneous coronary intervention

Statistics

Continuous values were expressed as mean +/- SD and nominal variables as count and percentages. Comparisons of means were realized by t-test for independent samples. Median values with the corresponding interquartile range (IQR) were computed for non-normally distributed variables. For comparisons of categorical data we used two-tailed Chi-square statistics with Yates’ correction and Fisher’s exact test as appropriate. One-year survival data for patients with or without pathologic echocardiographic or ECG findings were depicted using the Kaplan-Meier method. To adjust for age and centre heterogeneity, we fitted mixed linear Cox model for time-to-event data with random intercept for centre. For a straightforward interpretation we defined the measure "Number Needed to Change Decision" (NNCD) as the average number of patients to be diagnosed in order to encounter one for whom the treatment decision changes. NNCD is the inverse of the absolutefrequency. Nonparametric 95% confidence intervals were calculated and tests were performed by simulation (n = 10,000). All statistical analyses were performed using SPSS version 23.0 and higher (SPSS, Inc.) and R. Significance level for two-tailed tests is defined 0.05.

Results

Between May 8, 2013, and Aug 31, 2014, 2848 patients ≥ 60 years were admitted with an ICD diagnosis I 63.x (cerebral infarction) in the four study centres. Out of this screening population, 402 patients were enrolled and randomised to enhanced and prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring and to usual care (Holter-) ECG monitoring. Usual care included telemetry in 95% of patients and Holter-ECG in 75% of patients. Main exclusion criteria were history of AF or AF on admission ECG, ipsilateral ICA stenosis ≥ 50% according to NASCET criteria, and indication or contraindication for oral anticoagulation. Four patients were erroneously randomised because of unknown history of AF or a severe ipsilateral carotid artery stenosis and thus the data of 398 patients were finally analysed. 200 patients were randomised to prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring and 198 patients to standard-of-care monitoring.

Percentage of patients receiving transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography

TTE and TEE were performed according to local standards and the echocardiographic modalities were distributed approximately equally among the two ECG randomisation groups. 113 enhanced and prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring patients (56.5%) and 115 usual care patients (58.1%) received only TTE, 29 (14.5%) and 24 (12.1%) patients underwent only TEE and 51 patients of each group received both procedures (25.5% and 25.7%, respectively). Only 7 patients of the enhanced and prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring group (3.5%) and 8 patients of the usual care group (4.1%) received neither TTE nor TEE (Fig 1).
Fig 1

Trial profile of the present analysis.

The echocardiography rates differed between the four study centres, e.g. the percentage of patients receiving TEE ranged from 9 to 80% (Fig 2).
Fig 2

Rates of echocardiographies in each study centre.

Baseline characteristics of all patients divided in the randomisation groups and subdivided in four patient groups without echocardiography, with only TTE or TEE or both procedures, respectively, are summarized in Table 2. The main difference was that a higher percentage of patients with cardioembolism received TEE as compared to patients with other stroke aetiologies (p < 0.001) and that TEE patients were significantly younger (p < 0.001).
Table 2

Baseline characteristics of the study population.

Alln = 398Enhanced and prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring, n = 200Usual care, n = 198
no echocardio-graphy n = 7only TTE done n = 113only TEE done n = 29TTE and TEE done n = 51no echocardio-graphy n = 8only TTE done n = 115only TEE done n = 24TTE and TEE done n = 51
Mean age (years)72.7 (SD 7.5)74.7 (SD 5.5)74.5 (SD 7.1)68.7 (SD 6.6)68.5 (SD 6.6)76.1 (SD 7.8)74.8 (SD 7.4)72.4 (SD 8.1)69.7 (SD 6.4)
Female sex160 (40.1%)4 (57.1%)51 (45.1%)10 (34.5%)20 (39.2%)5 (62.5%)45 (39.1%)5 (20.8%)20 (39.2%)
Medical history
Art. hypertension316 (79.2%)6 (85.7%)95 (84.1%)21 (72.4%)35 (68.6%)8 (100.0%)92 (80.0%)17 (70.8%)42 (82.4%)
Diabetes mellitus108 (27.1%)4 (57.1%)37 (32.7%)6 (20.7%)9 (17.6%)2 (25.0%)28 (24.3%)7 (29.2%)15 (29.4%)
Hyperlipidemia164 (41.1%)3 (42.9%)49 (43.4%)5 (17.2%)20 (39.2%)4 (50.0%)48 (41.7%)10 (41.7%)25 (49.0%)
Smoking status
Current smoker70 (17.5%)1 (14.3%)15 (13.3%)7 (24.1%)11 (21.6%)1 (12.5%)16 (13.9%)6 (25.0%)13 (25.5%)
Previous smoker116 (29.1%)2 (28.6%)27 (23.9%)10 (34.5%)18 (35.5%)2 (25.0%)36 (31.3%)9 (37.5%)12 (23.5%)
Previous ischemic stroke77 (19.3%)1 (14.3%)20 (17.7%)5 (17.2%)8 (15.7%)3 (37.5%)24 (20.9%)2 (8.3%)14 (27.5%)
Previous TIA31 (7.8%)0 (0.0%)8 (7.1%)1 (3.4%)4 (7.8%)1 (12.5%)12 (10.4%)1 (4.2%)4 (7.8%)
Myocardial infarction38 (9.5%)1 (14.3%)14 (12.4%)3 (10.3%)2 (3.9%)1 (12.5%)11 (9.6%)1 (4.2%)5 (9.8%)
Coronary artery disease61 (15.3%)1 (14.3%)16 (14.2%)6 (20.7%)4 (7.8%)2 (25.0%)15 (13.0%)6 (25.0%)11 (21.6%)
TOAST classification
Large artery sclerosis7 (1.8%)0 (0.0%)4 (3.5%)0 (0.0%)2 (3.9%)0 (0.0%)1 (0.9%)0 (0.0%)0 (0.0%)
Cardioembolism75 (18.8%)0 (0.0%)19 (14.8%)10 (34.5%)16 (31.4%)0 (0.0%)13 (11.3%)5 (20.8%)12 (23.5%)
Small vessel occlusion118 (29.6%)0 (0.0%)35 (31.0%)8 (27.6%)12 (23.5%)0 (0.0%)40 (34.8%)0 (0.0%)17 (33.3%)
Stroke or other identified cause1 (0.3%)0 (0.0%)0 (0.0%)0 (0.0%)0 (0.0%)0 (0.0%)1 (0.9%)0 (0.0%)0 (0.0%)
Stroke of unknown cause197 (49.4%)7 (100.0%)55 (48.7%)11 (37.9%)21 (41.2%)8 (100.0%)60 (52.2%)13 (54.2%)22 (43.1%)
Score on NIHSS
Median NIHSS (IQR)3 (IQR 1–5)2 (IQR 1–6)3 (IQR 1–6)3 (IQR 2–5)3 (IQR 1–5)3 (IQR 1–8)2 (IQR 1–4)2 (IQR 1–3)3 (IQR 1–5)
Rhythm monitoring: As reported previously, AF was detected in 27 of 200 patients (13.5%) by enhanced and prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring in the intervention arm. [4] Twelve of 198 (6.1%) patients of the standard of care group had AF in routine ECGs. The older the patients were, the more often atrial fibrillation was detected (see Table 3). OAC was initiated in all patients. Four patients underwent pacemaker implantation within the follow-up period. None of them received it because of the Holter-ECG monitoring. The number needed to change decision (NNCD) was 8 for enhanced and prolonged monitoring (3x 10day Holter ECG, 95% CI = 5–12), 12 for the first 10-day Holter and 17 for usual care (95% CI = 10–33).
Table 3

Echocardiographic pathologies and potential therapeutic consequences.

pathologyPatients < 70 years(n = 131)Patients 70–75 years(n = 132)Patients > 75 years(n = 135)P value
Atrial fibrillation10 (7.6%)11 (8.3%)15 (11.1%)0.32
 Detected by enhanced and prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring8 (6.1%)10 (7.6%)9 (6.7)0.86
 Detected by usual care (Holter-) ECG monitoring2 (1.5%)1 (0.8%)6 (4.4%)0.11
LA thrombus (TEE)0 (0%)0 (0.0%)0 (0.0%)--
LAA thrombus (TEE)1 (0.8%)0 (0.0%)0 (0.0%)--
LV thrombus (TTE)0 (0.0%)0 (0.0%)0 (0.0%)--
LV aneurysm (TTE)0 (0%)0 (0.0%)1 (0.7)--
Myxoma (TEE)1 (0.8%)0 (0.0%)0 (0.0%)--
Endocarditis (TEE)0 (0.0%)0 (0.0%)0 (0.0%)--
PFO and/or ASA (TEE)20 (15.3%)14 (10.6%)6 (4.4%)0.003
Aortic aneurysm (TEE/TTE)3 (2.3%)1 (0.8%)0 (0.0%)0.061
Aortic plaques (TEE)13 (9.9%)13 (9.8%)8 (5.9%)0.24
Severe valve insufficiency (TTE)0 (0%)1 (0.8%)0 (0.0%)--
Severe valve stenosis (TTE)0 (0%)1 (0.8%)1 (0.7%)--
Valve thrombosis (TEE)1 (0.8%)1 (0.8%)0 (0.0%)--
LVEF < 50% (TTE)9 (8.9%)4 (3.0%)14 (10.4%)0.25
Hypo- and/or akinesia (TTE)13 (9.9%)9 (6.8%)22 (16.3%)0.094

† p values are from Armitage's trend test

Echocardiography: We found 179 pathologies in 112 patients receiving echocardiography: 90 pathologies were diagnosed using TTE and 89 using TEE. There were two patients with five different pathologies, two with four pathologies, fifteen with three pathologies, 23 with two pathologies and 70 patients with only one cardiac pathology. We detected 44 patients with hypo- and/or akinesia of at least one myocardial segment (11.1%, 29 patients with only hypokinesia and 15 patients with hypo- and akinesia), 40 patients with patent foramen ovale (PFO) and / or atrial septal aneurysm (ASA) (10.1%, 7 patients with ASA only, 25 patients with PFO only and 8 patients with combined PFO and ASA), 34 patients with aortic plaques (8.5%, varying from 1 to 18 plaques per patient) and 27 patients with a reduced LVEF < 50% (6.8%, ranging from 15 to 49%). To reflect the age-dependency of pathologies detected by echocardiography, we divided the study population into three age groups: (I) < 70 years, n = 131, (II) 70–75 years, n = 132, and (III) > 75 years (n = 135). The younger the patients were the more often PFO and / or ASA was detected (p = 0.003), furthermore there were trends towards an age-dependency of aortic aneurysm (p = 0.061) and wall motion disorders (p = 0.094), see Table 3). † p values are from Armitage's trend test

Clinical consequences of diagnostic procedures

A high-risk source of cardiac thromboembolism was detected in four (1.0%) versus zero patients by TEE and TTE, respectively. A medium-risk source of cardioembolism was found in 40 patients (15.5%) by TEE, whereas none was detected by TTE.15 of all 383 patients who underwent echocardiography (3.9%), were treated as a consequence of the echocardiographic findings. Only one therapeutic decision was based on TTE. This corresponds to a rate of 0.3% of all performed 330 TTEs (Number needed to change decision (NNCD) 330) and to a rate of 9.0% of all conducted 155 TEEs (NNCD 12). In twelve patients, the therapy shifted from antiplatelet drugs to OAC, two patients underwent surgery and one patient received PFO closure. Most patients who received OAC were patients with PFO and/or ASA. Anticoagulation for PFO/ASA was mainly driven by centre policies (anticoagulation rates for PFO/ASA were 35.7%, 5.6%, 50.0%, 0.0% for centres 1–4, respectively). Therapy was shifted towards OAC because of deep vein thrombosis in two patients and because of repeated strokes of unknown cause in one case. Two patients had ASA only and were treated with OAC because of a right to left shunt documented with TEE or bubble test, respectively. A comparison between the changes of therapeutic regime based on the four diagnostic methods (TTE, TEE, enhanced and prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring and routine (24-hours) ECG or telemetry) is shown in Fig 3.
Fig 3

Rate of changes in therapeutic decisions based on echocardiography or ECG.

Prognosis of patients with pathologic ECG and echocardiography findings

17 study patients died within one year. Of those, 16 received echocardiographic examinations. Three different echocardiographic pathologies were detected in these patients: wall motion abnormalities in six patients, a reduced LVEF and aortic plaques each in three patients. Patients with pathologic echocardiographic findings had a trend towards higher one-year mortality, whereas pathologic ECG findings were not associated with a higher age-adjusted one-year mortality (p = 0.076 vs. p = 0.71, see Fig 4). The death of all three patients with the combination of reduced LVEF and wall motion abnormalities was classified as “cardiovascular”.
Fig 4

Age-adjusted one-year mortality in dependency of the presence of pathologic echocardiographic or ECG findings.

Discussion

We evaluated the diagnostic value of echocardiography in comparison to Holter-ECG monitoring in patients with acute ischemic stroke ≥ 60 years with respect to therapeutic consequences. While the study design allowed a randomised comparison between a strategy of prolonged ECG monitoring and usual care ECG monitoring, the analysis regarding echocardiography was based on observational non-randomised comparisons. Most therapeutic changes were based on repeated prolonged ECG-monitoring by means of three 10-day Holter-ECGs (13.5%). TEE and conventional monitoring led to a different therapy in 9.0% and 6.1%, respectively. TTE was responsible only for one new therapeutic decision (0.3%). Furthermore, our data showed a trend towards higher one-year mortality in patients with abnormal echocardiographic findings. Previous studies have compared TEE and TTE. Similarly to our findings, the superiority of TEE over TTE in the diagnostics of cardiac sources of thromboembolism was also demonstrated in two previous studies that observed a change of therapeutic regimen in 41% or 21.4% of stroke patients because of TEE findings and 0% or 4.2% because of TTE findings [19,13]. The detection rate of high- or medium-risk sources of cardioembolism in our study (1.0% and 15.5%) was lower than previously reported (high-risk sources of cardioembolism in up to 10% of patients [20] and medium-risk sources in up to 59.4% of all investigated patients [13]). Counterintuitive, patients’ age does not seem to play an important role: whereas in a study with patients < 50 years found a potential source of cardiac embolism in 30% by TEE and in 10% by TTE [21], a study, which included only patients ≥ 80 years, documented a source of cardiac embolism in 35% of patients with TEE [22], which is higher in comparison to our data. Differences in definitions of high- and medium-risk sources of cardioembolism and pre-selection for TEE might explain the differences in detection rates of sources of cardiac embolism. The most common reasons for therapeutic changes by echocardiography were PFO and ASA in combination (n = 5), isolated PFO (n = 3) or isolated ASA (n = 2). The most common therapeutic change was anticoagulation which is in line with previous trials. However, at the time of the study, therapeutic recommendations for PFO and ASA recommended anticoagulation in selected cases because three randomised trials CLOSURE-1, PC and RESPECT [23-25] were negative for PFO closure. Recently, the CLOSE and the REDUCE study clearly showed a benefit of PFO closure over medical management which will lead to a more prominent role of TEE in the near future [26-28] and more patients with PFO being treated by PFO closure. However, all patients in our study were aged 60 years and above whereas the patients in the randomised PFO trials were younger than 60 years. The detection of large PFOs by TTE may have had a major influence on the value of the procedure in terms of therapeutic consequences. The most common diagnostic finding by prolonged monitoring was detection of AF and all patients with AF were treated with OAC according to current guidelines. Other diagnostic findings (e. g. AV block, pauses) were rare and did not lead to direct therapeutic consequences. There was a trend towards a higher mortality rate in patients with echocardiographic pathologies. Wall motion abnormalities and a reduced LVEF were the most common pathologies which are indicators of heart failure and/or coronary artery disease. This may easily explain the increase in mortality risk. As a clinical consequence, the diagnostic workup in stroke patients should not be limited to the identification of the most likely aetiology of the occurred ischemic event, but consider the stroke patient as a patient at risk for other cardiovascular morbidities. Closer interdisciplinary cooperation between neurologists and cardiologists may have led to further diagnostic / therapeutic measures (e.g. cardiac catheterization, revascularization) and a prospective trial investigating a more invasive evaluation of these patients seems useful. The one-year mortality did not differ significantly between the group of patients with and without pathologic ECG findings. This may be explained by the high rate of anticoagulation of detected AF cases. The unique feature of our study is a head-to-head comparison of prolonged monitoring for 30 days in all patients in the intervention arm and echocardiographic data in 96% of the patients. This head-to-head comparison clearly shows that prolonged monitoring leads to 50% more therapeutic changes than TEE and 27fold more therapeutic changes than TTE. Hence, prolonged monitoring should receive a more prominent role in the workup of stroke patients in the future and a restriction to only 24 hours (as e.g. in the clinical construct of ESUS [29] or the guidelines of ESO or AHA/ASA [2,3]) cannot be recommended. Under conditions of cost pressure or limited resources, predictors of increased AF prevalence and therefore possible preselection criteria for prolonged ECG monitoring are age [30], left atrial size and function [31], enhanced supraventricular ectopy [32], elevated levels of natriuretic peptides [33]and others. In contrast, there is not much literature about preselection criteria for echocardiography. Strengths of our study include the randomised, controlled and prospective multicenter study design and the four study centres representing rural, urban and teaching hospitals/university hospitals. However, echocardiography rates differed widely between the centres which limits generalisability and may reflect selection bias. The main reason for varying rates of TTE and TEE is local in-house practice of the four study centers, which represent two university, one large city and one hospital covering a rural area. It reflects different interpretations of the current guidelines. Importantly, the German Stroke Society requires at least 15% of patients with ischemic stroke to be investigated by transesophageal echocardiography. Furthermore, large and potentially relevant interatrial shunts can also be detected by TTE after application of a contrast agent. [34] Although performed in clinical practice, this approach was not sufficiently evaluated in clinical trials at that point and was not prospectively documented in our trial, but may lead to a more relevant role of TTE in the future. One of the main limitations is our substudy design without a standardized algorithm and without a randomization of the two echocardiographic modalities, which would have been advantageous for the present question. Furthermore, our results were obtained in patients aged ≥ 60 years. The prevalence of PFO is likely to be higher in younger stroke patients [35], whereas the prevalence of AF is supposed to be higher in older patients [30], which might partly explain the diagnostic superiority of repeated and prolonged Holter-ECG monitoring in our study cohort. Additionally, although Find-AFRANDOMISED was a prospective randomised trial, this analysis was not pre-specified and should therefore be considered descriptive and hypothesis-generating. In summary, our results show that enhanced and prolonged ECG-monitoring is the key tool in the cardiac workup of ischemic stroke in patients older than 60 years and should therefore play a more prominent role in future guidelines. Echocardiography of any type helps to identify a subgroup of stroke patients at high cardiovascular risk. A better neurocardiologic diagnostic and therapeutic collaboration and further appropriate trials are warranted.

Find-AFRANDOMISED study protocol.

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CONSORT checklist.

(DOC) Click here for additional data file.

Raw data Find-AFRANDOMISED study subanalysis.

(XLSX) Click here for additional data file.
  33 in total

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Authors:  Mark Weber-Krüger; Götz Gelbrich; Raoul Stahrenberg; Jan Liman; Pawel Kermer; Gerhard F Hamann; Joachim Seegers; Klaus Gröschel; Rolf Wachter
Journal:  Am Heart J       Date:  2014-07-03       Impact factor: 4.749

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Authors:  Anthony J Furlan; Mark Reisman; Joseph Massaro; Laura Mauri; Harold Adams; Gregory W Albers; Robert Felberg; Howard Herrmann; Saibal Kar; Michael Landzberg; Albert Raizner; Lawrence Wechsler
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2012-03-15       Impact factor: 91.245

3.  Guidelines for management of ischaemic stroke and transient ischaemic attack 2008.

Authors: 
Journal:  Cerebrovasc Dis       Date:  2008-05-06       Impact factor: 2.762

4.  Transoesophageal echocardiography in selecting patients for anticoagulation after ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack.

Authors:  M Strandberg; R J Marttila; H Helenius; J Hartiala
Journal:  J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry       Date:  2002-07       Impact factor: 10.154

5.  European Stroke Organisation recommendations to establish a stroke unit and stroke center.

Authors:  E Bernd Ringelstein; Angel Chamorro; Markku Kaste; Peter Langhorne; Didier Leys; Philippe Lyrer; Vincent Thijs; Lars Thomassen; Danilo Toni
Journal:  Stroke       Date:  2013-01-29       Impact factor: 7.914

Review 6.  Guidelines for the Use of Echocardiography in the Evaluation of a Cardiac Source of Embolism.

Authors:  Muhamed Saric; Alicia C Armour; M Samir Arnaout; Farooq A Chaudhry; Richard A Grimm; Itzhak Kronzon; Bruce F Landeck; Kameswari Maganti; Hector I Michelena; Kirsten Tolstrup
Journal:  J Am Soc Echocardiogr       Date:  2016-01       Impact factor: 5.251

7.  Percutaneous closure of patent foramen ovale in cryptogenic embolism.

Authors:  Bernhard Meier; Bindu Kalesan; Heinrich P Mattle; Ahmed A Khattab; David Hildick-Smith; Dariusz Dudek; Grethe Andersen; Reda Ibrahim; Gerhard Schuler; Antony S Walton; Andreas Wahl; Stephan Windecker; Peter Jüni
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2013-03-21       Impact factor: 91.245

8.  Improved detection of silent atrial fibrillation using 72-hour Holter ECG in patients with ischemic stroke: a prospective multicenter cohort study.

Authors:  Martin Grond; Marek Jauss; Gerhard Hamann; Erwin Stark; Roland Veltkamp; Darius Nabavi; Markus Horn; Christian Weimar; Martin Köhrmann; Rolf Wachter; Ludger Rosin; Paulus Kirchhof
Journal:  Stroke       Date:  2013-10-15       Impact factor: 7.914

9.  Patent foramen ovale in a large population of ischemic stroke patients: diagnosis, age distribution, gender, and race.

Authors:  Vishal Gupta; Dilek Yesilbursa; Wen Ying Huang; Kul Aggarwal; Vijaya Gupta; Camilo Gomez; Vinod Patel; Andrew P Miller; Navin C Nanda
Journal:  Echocardiography       Date:  2008-02       Impact factor: 1.724

10.  Age-dependent yield of screening for undetected atrial fibrillation in stroke patients: the Find-AF study.

Authors:  Rolf Wachter; Mark Weber-Krüger; Joachim Seegers; Frank Edelmann; Janin Wohlfahrt; Katrin Wasser; Götz Gelbrich; Gerd Hasenfuß; Raoul Stahrenberg; Jan Liman; Klaus Gröschel
Journal:  J Neurol       Date:  2013-05-01       Impact factor: 4.849

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  3 in total

Review 1.  Cardiac Imaging After Ischemic Stroke or Transient Ischemic Attack.

Authors:  S Camen; K G Haeusler; R B Schnabel
Journal:  Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep       Date:  2020-06-30       Impact factor: 5.081

Review 2.  Current Challenges and Future Directions in Handling Stroke Patients With Patent Foramen Ovale-A Brief Review.

Authors:  Charlotte Huber; Rolf Wachter; Johann Pelz; Dominik Michalski
Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2022-04-28       Impact factor: 4.003

Review 3.  Expert opinion paper on cardiac imaging after ischemic stroke.

Authors:  Renate B Schnabel; Stephan Camen; Fabian Knebel; Andreas Hagendorff; Udo Bavendiek; Michael Böhm; Wolfram Doehner; Matthias Endres; Klaus Gröschel; Andreas Goette; Hagen B Huttner; Christoph Jensen; Paulus Kirchhof; Grigorios Korosoglou; Ulrich Laufs; Jan Liman; Caroline Morbach; Darius Günther Nabavi; Tobias Neumann-Haefelin; Waltraud Pfeilschifter; Sven Poli; Timolaos Rizos; Andreas Rolf; Joachim Röther; Wolf Rüdiger Schäbitz; Thorsten Steiner; Götz Thomalla; Rolf Wachter; Karl Georg Haeusler
Journal:  Clin Res Cardiol       Date:  2021-06-18       Impact factor: 5.460

  3 in total

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