| Literature DB >> 33787300 |
Beom Joon Kim1, Yong-Jin Cho2, Keun-Sik Hong2, Jun Lee3, Joon-Tae Kim4, Kang Ho Choi4, Tai Hwan Park5, Sang-Soon Park5, Jong-Moo Park6, Kyusik Kang6, Soo Joo Lee7, Jae Guk Kim7, Jae-Kwan Cha8, Dae-Hyun Kim8, Byung-Chul Lee9, Kyung-Ho Yu9, Mi-Sun Oh9, Dong-Eog Kim10, Wi-Sun Ryu10, Jay Chol Choi11, Wook-Joo Kim12, Dong-Ick Shin13, Sung Il Sohn14, Jeong-Ho Hong14, Ji Sung Lee15, Juneyoung Lee16, Moon-Ku Han1, Philip B Gorelick17, Hee-Joon Bae1.
Abstract
Background It remains unclear whether physicians' attitudes toward timely management of elevated blood pressure affect the risk of stroke recurrence. Methods and Results From a multicenter stroke registry database, we identified 2933 patients with acute ischemic stroke who were admitted to participating centers in 2011, survived at the 1-year follow-up period, and returned to outpatient clinics ≥2 times after discharge. As a surrogate measure of physicians' attitude, individual treatment intensification (TI) scores were calculated by dividing the difference between the frequencies of observed and expected medication changes by the frequency of clinic visits and categorizing them into 5 groups. The association between TI groups and the recurrence of stroke within 1 year was analyzed using hierarchical frailty models, with adjustment for clustering within each hospital and relevant covariates. Mean±SD of the TI score was -0.13±0.28. The TI score groups were significantly associated with increased risk of recurrent stroke compared with Group 3 (TI score range, -0.25 to 0); Group 1 (range, -1 to -0.5), adjusted hazard ratio (HR) 13.43 (95% CI, 5.95-30.35); Group 2 (range, -0.5 to -0.25), adjusted HR 4.59 (95% CI, 2.01-10.46); and Group 4 (TI score 0), adjusted HR 6.60 (95% CI, 3.02-14.45); but not with Group 5 (range, 0-1), adjusted HR 1.68 (95% CI, 0.62-4.56). This elevated risk in the lowest TI score groups persisted when confining analysis to those with hypertension, history of blood pressure-lowering medication, no atrial fibrillation, and regular clinic visits and stratifying the subjects by functional capacity at discharge. Conclusions A low TI score, which implies physicians' therapeutic inertia in blood pressure management, was associated with a higher risk of recurrent stroke. The TI score may be a useful performance indicator in the outpatient clinic setting to prevent recurrent stroke.Entities:
Keywords: clinical inertia; hypertension; prevention; stroke; treatment intensification
Year: 2021 PMID: 33787300 DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.120.019457
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Heart Assoc ISSN: 2047-9980 Impact factor: 5.501