Overlap of diseases underlying ischemic stroke: the ASCOD phenotyping

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_9C7B5F311EDB
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Overlap of diseases underlying ischemic stroke: the ASCOD phenotyping
Journal
Stroke
Author(s)
Sirimarco G., Lavallee P. C., Labreuche J., Meseguer E., Cabrejo L., Guidoux C., Klein I. F., Olivot J. M., Abboud H., Adrai V., Kusmierek J., Ratani S., Touboul P. J., Mazighi M., Steg P. G., Amarenco P.
ISSN
1524-4628 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0039-2499
Publication state
Published
Issued date
09/2013
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
44
Number
9
Pages
2427-33
Language
english
Notes
Sirimarco, Gaia
Lavallee, Philippa C
Labreuche, Julien
Meseguer, Elena
Cabrejo, Lucie
Guidoux, Celine
Klein, Isabelle F
Olivot, Jean-Marc
Abboud, Halim
Adrai, Valerie
Kusmierek, Jerome
Ratani, Samina
Touboul, Pierre-Jean
Mazighi, Mikael
Steg, Philippe Gabriel
Amarenco, Pierre
eng
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Stroke. 2013 Sep;44(9):2427-33. doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.113.001363. Epub 2013 Jul 16.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: ASCOD phenotyping (A, atherosclerosis; S, small vessel disease; C, cardiac pathology; O, other causes; and D, dissection) assigns a degree of likelihood to every potential cause (1 for potentially causal, 2 for causality is uncertain, 3 for unlikely causal but disease is present, 0 for absence of disease, and 9 for insufficient workup to rule out the disease) commonly encountered in ischemic stroke. We used ASCOD to investigate the overlap of underlying vascular diseases and their prognostic implication. METHODS: A single rater applied ASCOD in 405 patients enrolled in the Asymptomatic Myocardial Ischemia in Stroke and Atherosclerotic Disease study. RESULTS: A was present in 90% of patients (A1=43% and A2=15%), C in 52% (C1=23% and C2=14%), and S in 66% (S1=11% and S2=2%). On the basis of grades 1 and 2, 25% of patients had multiple underlying diseases, and 80% when all 3 grades were considered. The main overlap was found between A and C; among C1 patients, A was present in 92% of cases (A1=28%, A2=20%, and A3=44%). Conversely, among A1 patients, C was present in 47% of cases (C1=15%, C2=15%, and C3=17%). Grades for C were associated with gradual increase in the 3-year risk of vascular events, whereas risks were similar across A grades, meaning that the mere presence of atherosclerotic disease qualifies for high risk, regardless the degree of likelihood for A. CONCLUSIONS: ASCOD phenotyping shows that the large overlap among the 3 main diseases, and the high prevalence of any form of atherosclerotic disease, reinforces the need to systematically control atherosclerotic risk factors in all ischemic strokes.
Keywords
Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Atherosclerosis/diagnosis/*epidemiology, Brain Ischemia/classification/diagnosis/*epidemiology, Cardiovascular Diseases/classification/diagnosis/*epidemiology, Comorbidity, Female, Heart Diseases/diagnosis/epidemiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, *Phenotype, Prognosis, Risk, Stroke/classification/diagnosis/*epidemiology, atherosclerosis, etiology, stroke
Pubmed
Open Access
Yes
Create date
28/02/2018 15:47
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:03
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