| Literature DB >> 34715796 |
Mathias Fousse1, Marcus M Unger2, Jil Kauffmann1, Daniel Grün1, Umut Yilmaz3, Gudrun Wagenpfeil4, Klaus Faßbender1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Stroke is among the most common causes of death and disability worldwide. Despite the relevance of stroke-related disease burden, which is constantly increasing due to the demographic change in industrialized countries with an ageing population and consecutively an increase in age-associated diseases, there is sparse evidence concerning acute stroke treatment and treatment-related outcome in the elderly patient group. This retrospective study aimed at analysing patient characteristics, therapy-related complications and functional outcome in stroke patients aged 90 years or older who underwent acute stroke treatment (i.e. intravenous thrombolysis, mechanical thrombectomy, or both).Entities:
Keywords: Elderly; Geriatrics; Stroke; Thrombectomy; Thrombolysis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34715796 PMCID: PMC8556881 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-021-02566-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Fig. 1Flow chart visualizing identification of patients that were subsequently analysed
Comorbidities and risk factors in patients with acute ischaemic stroke
| Cases receiving acute therapeutic intervention (n = 64) | Cases not receiving acute therapeutic intervention (n = 147) | p value | |
|---|---|---|---|
missing values (n, [%]) | 58 (90.6%) 1 (1.6%) | 125 (85.0%) 1 (0.7%) | 0.195 |
missing values (n, [%]) | 37 (57.8%) 2 (3.1%) | 65 (44.2%) 6 (4.1%) | 0.054 |
missing values (n, [%]) | 10 (15.6%) 1 (1.6%) | 21 (14.3%) 1 (0.7%) | 0.781 |
missing values (n, [%]) | 14 (21.9%) 1 (1.6%) | 35 (23.8%) 1 (0.7%) | 0.784 |
missing values (n, [%]) | 29(45.3%) 0 | 77 (42.3%) 0 | 0.345 |
missing values (n, [%]) | 4 (6.3%) 1 (1.6%) | 3 (2.1%) 1 (0.7%) | 0.117 |
Demographic and clinical data of ischaemic stroke patients with and without an acute therapeutic intervention
| Cases receiving acute therapeutic intervention ( | Cases not receiving acute therapeutic intervention ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
Age in years (median, [range]) | 92 [90–98] | 91 [90–98] | 0.906 |
Sex female / male (n, [%]) | 43 [67.2%] / 21 [32.8%] | 111 [75.5%] / 36 [24.5%] | 0.211 |
| NIHSS score upon admission (median, [range]) | 14 [2–40] | 6 [0–40] | < 0.001 |
mRS upon admission (median, [range]) | 5 [2–5] | 3 [0–5] | < 0.001 |
| Duration of inpatient stay in days (median, [range]) | 6 [2–40] | 6 [1–23] | 0.860 |
Number of drugs at the time of admission (median, [range]) | 6 [0–12] | 6 [0–17] | 0.533 |
| Way of admission (n, [%]) | 0.001 | ||
1. Self-initiated 2. emergency service (paramedics) | - 11 [17.2%] | 5 [3.4%] 67 [45.6%] | |
3. emergency service (physician) 4. emergency room 5. other hospital | 49 [76.6%] - 4 [6.2%] | 5 [3.4%] 10 [6.8%] - | |
| Aetiology (n, [%]) | 0.357 | ||
| 1. large-artery atherosclerosis | 32 [50.0%] | 60 [40.8%] | |
| 2. cardioembolism | 10 [15.6%] | 33 [22.4%] | |
| 3. small-vessel occlusion | 1 [1.6%] | 10 [6.8%] | |
| 4. stroke of other determined aetiology | – | – | |
| 5. stroke of undetermined aetiology (at discharge) | 18 [28.1%] | 37 [25.2%] | |
| 6. mixed aetiology | 3 [4.7%] | 7 [4.8%] | |
| Vessel occlusion (n, [%]) | < 0.001 | ||
| 1. Large vessel occlusion (anterior circulation) | 32 [50.1%] | 17 [11.6%] | |
| 2. Small vessel occlusion (anterior circulation) | 13 [20.3%] | 14 [9.5%] | |
3. posterior circulation 4. none | 6 [9.4%] 13 [20.3%] | 5 [3,4%] 111 [75.5%] |
Clinical data of all patients with ischaemic stroke having received an acute therapeutic intervention
| Cases receiving intravenous thrombolysis with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator ( | Cases receiving mechanical thrombectomy | |
|---|---|---|
| Time onset-to-admission (n, [%]) | ||
| 1. < 1 h | 10 [26.3%] | 12 [38.1%] |
| 2. 1–2 h | 15 [39.5%] | 11 [26.2%] |
| 3. 2–3 h | 7 [18.4%] | 3 [7.1%] |
| 4. 3–4.5 h | 2 [5.3%] | 4 [9.5%] |
| 5. > 4.5 h | 2 [5.3%] | 8 [19.0%] |
| 6. unknown | 2 [5.3%] | 4 [9.5%] |
| Door-to-needle (n, [%]) | ||
| 1. < 30 min | 9 [23.7%] | |
| 2. 30–45 min | 4 [10.5%] | |
| 3. 45–60 min | 10 [26.3%] | |
| 4. 60–120 min | 5 [13.2%] | |
| 5. > 120 min | 2 [5.3%] | |
| 6. before admission | 5 [13.2%] | |
| 7. unknown | 3 [7.9%] | |
| Door-to-puncture (n, [%]) | ||
| 1. 45–60 min | 4 [9.5%] | |
| 2. 60–90 min | 11 [26.2%] | |
| 3. > 90 min | 3 [7.2%] | |
| 4. unknown | 24 [57.1%] | |
| Recanalisation score, TICI (n, [%]) | ||
| 1. TICI 0 | 5 [11.9%] | |
| 2.TICI 1 | 1 [2.4%] | |
| 3.TICI 2a | 1 [2.4%] | |
| 4.TICI 2b +2c | 15 [35.7%] | |
| 5. TICI 3 | 20 [47.6%] | |
Fig. 2Distribution of modified Rankin Scale (mRS) scores upon admission (ad) and at discharge (dis). a shows the distribution for patients admitted due to acute stroke who did not qualify for or who declined acute stroke treatment („No acute stroke treatment“). b shows the distribution for patients admitted due to acute stroke who received intravenous thrombolysis, mechanical recanalisation or a combination of both („Acute stroke treatment“). c shows the absolute and relative (%) numbers of patients with a good function status (mRS ≤2) upon admission (grey bars) and at discharge (white bars) for both groups
Differences concerning the mode of discharge or transfer to another hospital between the acute therapeutic intervention group and the group without acute therapeutic intervention
| Cases receiving acute therapeutic intervention ( | Cases not receiving acute therapeutic intervention ( | p 0.917 | |
|---|---|---|---|
(n, [%]) | 11 (17.2%) | 31 (21.1%) | |
| 9 (14.1%) | 18 (12.2%) | ||
(n, [%]) | 13 (20.4%) | 33 (22.4%) | |
| 21 (32.8%) | 37 (25.2%) | ||
| 2 (3.1%) | 9 (6.1%) | ||
(n, [%]) | 8 (12.5%) | 16 (10.9%) | |
(n, [%]) | 0 (0%) | 3 (2.1%) |