| Literature DB >> 35777049 |
Rui Shao1, Zengna Wang, Hongfeng Shi, Yan Li, Yingle Zhuang, Juan Xu, Min Xu.
Abstract
There is conflicting information regarding the impact of chronic atrial fibrillation (AF) on the outcomes of thrombolyzed patients with stroke. This study was designed to identify high-risk patients with chronic AF who had undergone thrombolysis treatment and to explore whether the baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) could be used to distinguish poor clinical outcomes in thrombolyzed patients. A total of 164 acute ischemic stroke patients with chronic AF were enrolled in this study. The patients were categorized as having poor or favorable outcomes. A favorable 90-day outcome was defined as a modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score ≤2. Our study showed that the baseline NIHSS score of patients with poor functional recovery (mRS >2) was significantly higher than that of patients with favorable outcomes (median 16 vs 12). Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis of mRS score showed that a baseline NIHSS score of 14 was the optimal threshold for predicting unfavorable outcomes in patients with chronic AF. Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that baseline NIHSS score >14 was independently associated with poor outcomes (odds ratio = 4.182, 95% confidence interval 2.092-8.361). Our study showed that stroke severity modified the effect of chronic AF on the outcome of thrombolytic therapy. The approach of stratifying stroke severity may be used to evaluate treatment strategies for decision making in intravenous thrombolytic therapy for acute stroke with chronic AF.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35777049 PMCID: PMC9239630 DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000029322
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) ISSN: 0025-7974 Impact factor: 1.817
Figure 1.Research flow chart.
Comparison between favorable and poor outcome patients with chronic AF treated with rt-PA.
| Characteristic | Favorable outcome patients (n = 72) | Poor outcome patients (n = 92) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) median(IQR) | 71 (66–78) | 68 (62–78) | 0.144 |
| Male n(%) | 42 (58%) | 56 (61%) | 0.742 |
| Medical history, n(%) | |||
| Hypertension | 17 (24%) | 28 (30%) | 0.331 |
| Diabetes mellitus | 23 (32%) | 26 (28%) | 0.609 |
| Previous stroke | 21 (29%) | 19 (21%) | 0.208 |
| Smoke | 27 (38%) | 34 (37%) | 0.943 |
| Medications, n(%) | |||
| Anticoagulation use | 3 (4%) | 7 (8%) | 0.558 |
| Antiplatelet use | 19 (26%) | 25 (27%) | 0.910 |
| Glucose(mmol/L) median(IQR) | 8.4 (6.7–9.8) | 8.1 (6.9–9.6) | 0.749 |
| Baseline NIHSS median(IQR) | 12 (8–16) | 16 (12–21) | 0.001 |
| CHADS–VASc score | 2 (2–3) | 2 (1–3) | 0.178 |
| Symptomatic ICH, n(%) | 5 (7%) | 13 (14%) | 0.144 |
AF = atrial fibrillation, ICH = intracranial hemorrhage, IQR = interquartile range, NIHSS = National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale, rt-PA = recombinant tissue plasminogen activator.
Figure 2.The ROC curve analysis showed that the area under the curve (AUC) of baseline NIHSS scores for predicting unfavorable outcomes at 90 days was 0.708. ROC curve = receiver operating characteristic curve.
Clinical outcomes of the study patients.
| NIHSS ≤14 (n = 84) | NIHSS >14 (n = 80) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Favorable outcome (mRS≤2) at 90 days | 50 (59.5%) | 22 (27.5%) | < 0.001 |
| Symptomatic ICH | 9 (10.7%) | 9 (11.3%) | 0.913 |
| Mortality | 3 (3.6%) | 10 (12.5%) | 0.068 |
ICH = intracranial hemorrhage, RS = modified Rankin Scale, NIHSS = National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale.
Figure 3.Bar graph showed that there was significantly more favorable prognosis than poor prognoses in patients with an NIHSS score 14 or less, while the outcome was reversed in people with an NIHSS score >14.
Figure 4.Association of mRS outcome at 90 days with use of alteplase in patients with baseline NIHSS scores ≤14 and those with baseline NIHSS scores of >14. Each box of the horizontal bar corresponds to the mRS category specified by the color code. Numbers in each box denote the percentage of patients having the mRS score corresponding to the box. mRS = modified Rankin Scale, NIHSS = National Institute of Health Stroke Scale.