125 results on '"Greving JP"'
Search Results
2. Cerebral Perfusion and the Occurrence of Nonfocal Transient Neurological Attacks
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Oudeman, EA, Bron, Esther, van den Berg-Vos, RM, Greving, JP, Biessels, GJ, Klijn, CJM, Kappelle, LJ, Oudeman, EA, Bron, Esther, van den Berg-Vos, RM, Greving, JP, Biessels, GJ, Klijn, CJM, and Kappelle, LJ
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- 2019
3. Antiplatelet Therapy After Noncardioembolic Stroke An Individual Patient Data Network Meta-Analysis
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Greving, JP, Diener, HC, Reitsma, JB, Bath, PM, Csiba, L, Hacke, W, Kappelle, LJ, Koudstaal, Peter, Leys, D, Mas, JL, Sacco, RL, Algra, A, Greving, JP, Diener, HC, Reitsma, JB, Bath, PM, Csiba, L, Hacke, W, Kappelle, LJ, Koudstaal, Peter, Leys, D, Mas, JL, Sacco, RL, and Algra, A
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- 2019
4. External validation of risk scores for major bleeding in a population-based cohort of transient ischemic attack and ischemic stroke patients
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Hilkens, NA, Li, L, Rothwell, PM, Algra, A, and Greving, JP
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Male ,Original Contributions ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Neurology ,Hemorrhage ,Brain Ischemia ,Risk Factors ,Humans ,human ,Advanced and Specialised Nursing ,Aged ,risk ,Aged, 80 and over ,Aspirin ,Middle Aged ,bleeding ,stroke ,Ischemic Attack, Transient ,ComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSING ,Female ,antiplatelet agents ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Supplemental Digital Content is available in the text., Background and Purpose— The S2TOP-BLEED score may help to identify patients at high risk of bleeding on antiplatelet drugs after a transient ischemic attack or ischemic stroke. The score was derived on trial populations, and its performance in a real-world setting is unknown. We aimed to externally validate the S2TOP-BLEED score for major bleeding in a population-based cohort and to compare its performance with other risk scores for bleeding. Methods— We studied risk of bleeding in 2072 patients with a transient ischemic attack or ischemic stroke on antiplatelet agents in the population-based OXVASC (Oxford Vascular Study) according to 3 scores: S2TOP-BLEED, REACH, and Intracranial-B2LEED3S. Performance was assessed with C statistics and calibration plots. Results— During 8302 patient-years of follow-up, 117 patients had a major bleed. The S2TOP-BLEED score showed a C statistic of 0.69 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.64–0.73) and accurate calibration for 3-year risk of major bleeding. The S2TOP-BLEED score was much more predictive of fatal bleeding than nonmajor bleeding (C statistics 0.77; 95% CI, 0.69–0.85 and 0.50; 95% CI, 0.44–0.58). The REACH score had a C statistic of 0.63 (95% CI, 0.58–0.69) for major bleeding and the Intracranial-B2LEED3S score a C statistic of 0.60 (95% CI, 0.51–0.70) for intracranial bleeding. The ratio of ischemic events versus bleeds decreased across risk groups of bleeding from 6.6:1 in the low-risk group to 1.8:1 in the high-risk group. Conclusions— The S2TOP-BLEED score shows modest performance in a population-based cohort of patients with a transient ischemic attack or ischemic stroke. Although bleeding risks were associated with risks of ischemic events, risk stratification may still be useful to identify a subgroup of patients at particularly high risk of bleeding, in whom preventive measures are indicated.
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- 2018
5. Higher risk of intracranial aneurysms and subarachnoid haemorrhage in siblings of families with intracranial aneurysms
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Zuurbier, CCM, primary, Greving, JP, additional, Rinkel, GJE, additional, and Ruigrok, YM, additional
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- 2019
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6. Voorspellen van ernstige bloedingen bij gebruik van plaatjesaggregatieremmers na een TIA of herseninfarct : De S2TOP-BLEED score
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Hilkens, NA, Algra, A, and Greving, JP
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- 2017
7. Body mass index and outcome after revascularization for symptomatic carotid artery stenosis
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Volkers, EJ, Greving, JP, Hendrikse, J, Algra, A, Kappelle, LJ, Becquemin, JP, Bonati, LH, Brott, TG, Bulbulia, R, Calvet, D, Eckstein, HH, Fraedrich, G, Gregson, J, Halliday, A, Howard, G, Jansen, O, Roubin, GS, Brown, MM, Mas, JL, Ringleb, PA, Carotid Stenosis Trialists' Collaboration, COLLABORATORS, Algra, AProf, Becquemin, JPProf, Mas, JLProf, Brown, MMProf, Hendrikse, JProf, Eckstein, HHProf, Fraedrich, GProf, Jansen, OProf, Ringleb, PAProf, Brott, TGProf, Howard, GProf, Roubin, GSProf, and Radcliffe, J
- Abstract
To determine whether the obesity paradox exists in patients who undergo carotid artery stenting (CAS) or carotid endarterectomy (CEA) for symptomatic carotid artery stenosis. We combined individual patient data from 2 randomized trials (Endarterectomy vs Angioplasty in Patients with Symptomatic Severe Carotid Stenosis and Stent-Protected Angioplasty vs Carotid Endarterectomy) and 3 centers in a third trial (International Carotid Stenting Study). Baseline body mass index (BMI) was available for 1,969 patients and classified into 4 groups: 120 days after randomization). This outcome was compared between different BMI strata in CAS and CEA patients separately, and in the total group. We performed intention-to-treat multivariable Cox regression analyses. Median follow-up was 2.0 years. Stroke or death occurred in 159 patients in the periprocedural (cumulative risk 8.1%) and in 270 patients in the postprocedural period (rate 4.8/100 person-years). BMI did not affect periprocedural risk of stroke or death for patients assigned to CAS (ptrend = 0.39) or CEA (ptrend = 0.77) or for the total group (ptrend = 0.48). Within the total group, patients with BMI 25
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- 2017
8. The Intracranial-B2LEED3S Score and the Risk of Intracranial Hemorrhage in Ischemic Stroke Patients Under Antiplatelet Treatment
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Amarenco, P, Sissani, L, Labreuche, J, Vicaut, E, Bousser, MG, Chamorro, A, Fisher, M, Ford, I, Fox, KM, Hennerici, MG, Mattle, H, Rothwell, PM, Steg, PG, Diener, H-C, Sacco, RL, Greving, JP, and Algra, A
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Male ,PARALLEL-GROUP ,Time Factors ,RECURRENT STROKE ,Clinical Neurology ,Lacune ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,CONTROLLED-TRIAL ,Risk Assessment ,ATTACK PERFORM ,Disease-Free Survival ,Brain Ischemia ,DOUBLE-BLIND ,Elderly ,Risk Factors ,Journal Article ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,EXTENDED-RELEASE DIPYRIDAMOLE ,CARDIOVASCULAR EVENTS ,Cerebrovascular disease ,PERFORM and PRoFESS Committees and Investigators ,Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Science & Technology ,CEREBRAL MICROBLEEDS ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROMES ,Low body mass index ,1103 Clinical Sciences ,Middle Aged ,Cardiovascular disease ,PROGNOSTIC MODEL ,Stroke ,Treatment Outcome ,Peripheral Vascular Disease ,Multivariate Analysis ,Cardiovascular System & Cardiology ,Blood pressure ,Dual antithrombotic treatment or anticoagulant ,Linear Models ,Asian ethnicity ,Sex ,Female ,Neurosciences & Neurology ,1109 Neurosciences ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Intracranial Hemorrhages ,Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors - Abstract
BACKGROUND Chronic antiplatelet therapy in the post-acute phase of non-cardioembolic ischemic stroke is limited by the risk of intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) complications. METHODS We developed an ICH risk score based on the PERFORM trial cohort (n = 19,100), which included patients with a non-cardioembolic ischemic stroke or transient ischemic attack, and externally validated this score in one contemporary trial of very similar size and inclusion criteria, the PRoFESS trial (n = 20,332 patients). Outcome was ICH over 2 years. A Cox proportional-hazard regression analysis identified risk factors. Discrimination was quantified with c-statistics and calibration was assessed by comparing predicted and observed ICH risk in PERFORM and PRoFESS. RESULTS ICH occurred within 2 years in 263 (1.4%) patients in PERFORM trial and in 246 (1.2%) patients in PRoFESS trial. A 13-point score based on 9 items (Intracranial-B2LEED3S score - low body mass index, blood pressure, lacune, elderly, Asian ethnicity, coronary artery or cerebrovascular disease history, dual antithrombotic agent or oral anticoagulant, gender) was derived from the PERFORM trial. In PERFORM, the observed 2-year ICH risk varied from 0.75% in low-risk (score ≤2) to 2.44% in high-risk patients (score ≥5) with an acceptable calibration but a low discrimination both in PERFORM (c-statistic 0.64, 95% CI 0.61-0.68) and on external validation in PRoFESS (0.58, 95% CI 0.55-0.62). CONCLUSION The Intracranial-B2LEED3S score helps identify patients who are at a high risk of bleeding. However, other variables need to be identified to improve the score (e.g., microbleeds) (Clinical Trial Registration Information ISRCTN66157730). URL: http://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN66157730?totalResults=5&pageSize=10&page=1&searchType=basic-search&offset=3&q=&filters=conditionCategory%3ACirculatory+System%2CrecruitmentCountry%3ATaiwan%2CrecruitmentCountry%3AAustria&sort=.
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- 2017
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9. Higher risk of intracranial aneurysms and subarachnoid haemorrhage in siblings of families with intracranial aneurysms.
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Zuurbier, CCM, Greving, JP, Rinkel, GJE, and Ruigrok, YM
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- 2020
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10. Voorspellen van ernstige bloedingen bij gebruik van plaatjesaggregatieremmers na een TIA of herseninfarct: De S2TOP-BLEED score
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Cardiovasculaire Epi Team 6, Circulatory Health, JC onderzoeksprogramma Cardiovasculaire Epidemiologie, ZL Cerebrovasculaire Ziekten Medisch, Brain, Hilkens, NA, Algra, A, Greving, JP, Cardiovasculaire Epi Team 6, Circulatory Health, JC onderzoeksprogramma Cardiovasculaire Epidemiologie, ZL Cerebrovasculaire Ziekten Medisch, Brain, Hilkens, NA, Algra, A, and Greving, JP
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- 2017
11. The Missing Link in the Pathophysiology of Vascular Cognitive Impairment: Design of the Heart-Brain Study
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Hooghiemstra, AM, Bertens, AS, Leeuwis, AE, Bron, Esther, Bots, ML, Brunner-La Rocca, HP, de Craen, AJM, van der Geest, RJ, Greving, JP, Kappelle, LJ, Niessen, Wiro, van Oostenbrugge, RJ, van Osch, MJP, de Roos, A, van Rossum, AC, Biessels, GJ, van Buchem, MA, Daemen, M, van der Flier, WM, Hooghiemstra, AM, Bertens, AS, Leeuwis, AE, Bron, Esther, Bots, ML, Brunner-La Rocca, HP, de Craen, AJM, van der Geest, RJ, Greving, JP, Kappelle, LJ, Niessen, Wiro, van Oostenbrugge, RJ, van Osch, MJP, de Roos, A, van Rossum, AC, Biessels, GJ, van Buchem, MA, Daemen, M, and van der Flier, WM
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- 2017
12. Prediction models for intracranial hemorrhage or major bleeding in patients on antiplatelet therapy : a systematic review and external validation study
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Hilkens, NA, Algra, A, Greving, JP, Hilkens, NA, Algra, A, and Greving, JP
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- 2016
13. Prediction models for intracranial hemorrhage or major bleeding in patients on antiplatelet therapy: a systematic review and external validation study
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ZL Cerebrovasculaire Ziekten Medisch, Cardiovasculaire Epi Team 6, Circulatory Health, Brain, JC onderzoeksprogramma Cardiovasculaire Epidemiologie, Hilkens, NA, Algra, A, Greving, JP, ZL Cerebrovasculaire Ziekten Medisch, Cardiovasculaire Epi Team 6, Circulatory Health, Brain, JC onderzoeksprogramma Cardiovasculaire Epidemiologie, Hilkens, NA, Algra, A, and Greving, JP
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- 2016
14. Diagnostic yield and accuracy of CT angiography, MR angiography, and digital subtraction angiography for detection of macrovascular causes of intracerebral haemorrhage: prospective, multicentre cohort study
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van Asch, CJJ, Velthuis, BK, Rinkel, GJE, Algra, A, de Kort, GAP, Witkamp, TD, de Ridder, JCM, van Nieuwenhuizen, KM, Leeuw, FE, Schonewille, WJ, de Kort, PLM, Dippel, Diederik, Raaymakers, TWM, Hofmeijer, J, Wermer, MJH, Kerkhoff, H, Jellema, K, Bronner, IM, Remmers, MJM, Bienfait, HP, Witjes, RJGM, Greving, JP, Klijn, CJM, van Asch, CJJ, Velthuis, BK, Rinkel, GJE, Algra, A, de Kort, GAP, Witkamp, TD, de Ridder, JCM, van Nieuwenhuizen, KM, Leeuw, FE, Schonewille, WJ, de Kort, PLM, Dippel, Diederik, Raaymakers, TWM, Hofmeijer, J, Wermer, MJH, Kerkhoff, H, Jellema, K, Bronner, IM, Remmers, MJM, Bienfait, HP, Witjes, RJGM, Greving, JP, and Klijn, CJM
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STUDY QUESTION What are the diagnostic yield and accuracy of early computed tomography (CT) angiography followed by magnetic resonance imaging/angiography (MRI/MRA) and digital subtraction angiography (DSA) in patients with non-traumatic intracerebral haemorrhage? METHODS This prospective diagnostic study enrolled 298 adults (18-70 years) treated in 22 hospitals in the Netherlands over six years. CT angiography was performed within seven days of haemorrhage. If the result was negative, MRI/MRA was performed four to eight weeks later. DSA was performed when the CT angiography or MRI/MRA results were inconclusive or negative. The main outcome was a macrovascular cause, including arteriovenous malformation, aneurysm, dural arteriovenous fistula, and cavernoma. Three blinded neuroradiologists independently evaluated the images for macrovascular causes of haemorrhage. The reference standard was the best available evidence from all findings during one year's follow-up. STUDY ANSWER AND LIMITATIONS A macrovascular cause was identified in 69 patients (23%). 291 patients (98%) underwent CT angiography; 214 with a negative result underwent additional MRI/MRA and 97 with a negative result for both CT angiography and MRI/MRA underwent DSA. Early CT angiography detected 51 macrovascular causes (yield 17%, 95% confidence interval 13% to 22%). CT angiography with MRI/MRA identified two additional macrovascular causes (18%, 14% to 23%) and these modalities combined with DSA another 15 (23%, 18% to 28%). This last extensive strategy failed to detect a cavernoma, which was identified on MRI during follow-up (reference strategy). The positive predictive value of CT angiography was 72% (60% to 82%), of additional MRI/MRA was 35% (14% to 62%), and of additional DSA was 100% (75% to 100%). None of the patients experienced complications with CT angiography or MRI/MRA; 0.6% of patients who underwent DSA experienced permanent sequelae. Not all patients with negative CT angiography and MRI/M
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- 2015
15. Prevalence of asymptomatic carotid artery stenosis in the general population: an individual participant data meta-analysis.
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de Weerd M, Greving JP, Hedblad B, Lorenz MW, Mathiesen EB, O'Leary DH, Rosvall M, Sitzer M, Buskens E, Bots ML, de Weerd, Marjolein, Greving, Jacoba P, Hedblad, Bo, Lorenz, Matthias W, Mathiesen, Ellisiv B, O'Leary, Daniel H, Rosvall, Maria, Sitzer, Matthias, Buskens, Erik, and Bots, Michiel L
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- 2010
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16. Cost-effectiveness of preventive treatment of intracranial aneurysms: New data and uncertainties.
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Greving JP, Rinkel GJ, Buskens E, and Algra A
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- 2009
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17. Prevalence of asymptomatic carotid artery stenosis according to age and sex: systematic review and metaregression analysis.
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de Weerd M, Greving JP, de Jong AW, Buskens E, Bots ML, de Weerd, Marjolein, Greving, Jacoba P, de Jong, Anne W F, Buskens, Erik, and Bots, Michiel L
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- 2009
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18. Cost-effectiveness of aspirin treatment in the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease events in subgroups based on age, gender, and varying cardiovascular risk.
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Greving JP, Buskens E, Koffijberg H, and Algra A
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- 2008
19. Claims in advertisements for antihypertensive drugs in a Dutch medical journal.
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Greving JP, Denig P, de Zeeuq D, and Haaijer-Ruskamp FM
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- 2007
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20. Timing of procedural stroke and death in asymptomatic patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy: analysis of VACS, ACAS, ACST-1 and GALA RCTs
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Poorthuis, MHF, Bulbulia, R, Morris, DR, Pan, H, Rothwell, P, Algra , A, Becquemin, JP, Bonati, LH, Brott, TG, Brown, MM, Calvet, D, Eckstein, HH, Fraedrich, G, Gregson, J, Greving, JP, Hendrikse, J, Howard, G, Jansen, O, Mas, JL, Lewis, SC, de Borst, GJ, Halliday, A, and on behalf of the Carotid Stenosis Trialists' Collaboration
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cardiovascular diseases - Abstract
Background: The effectiveness of carotid endarterectomy (CEA) for stroke prevention depends on low procedural risks. We aimed to assess frequency and timing of procedural complications after CEA, which may clarify underlying mechanisms and help inform safe discharge policies. Methods: Individual patient data (N=8 752) were obtained from four large trials (VACS, ACAS, ACST-1, and GALA; 1983-2007). Patients undergoing CEA for asymptomatic carotid artery stenosis (N=3 694) directly after randomization were used for the present analysis. We divided the timing of procedural death and stroke into intraoperative day 0, postoperative day 0, day 1-3, and days 4-30. Results: In total, 103 (2.8%) patients had serious procedural complications (18 fatal strokes, 68 non-fatal strokes, 11 fatal myocardial infarctions, and 6 deaths from other causes). Of the 86 strokes, 67 (78%) were ipsilateral, 17 (20%) were contralateral, and two (2%) were vertebrobasilar. Forty-five strokes (52%) were ischaemic, 9 (10%) haemorrhagic and stroke subtype was not determined in 32 (37%) patients. Half the strokes happened on the day of CEA. Of all serious complications, 44 (43%) occurred on day 0 (20 intraoperative, 17 postoperative, and 7 with unclear timing), 23 (22%) occurred on days 1-3, and 36 (35%) on days 4-30. Conclusions: At least half of the procedural strokes in this study are ischaemic and ipsilateral to the treated artery. Half of all procedural complications occurred on the day of surgery, but one third after day 3 when many patients have been discharged. Reported in-hospital stroke or death rates might underestimate true risks after CEA.
21. Surviving space-occupying cerebral infarction: A fate worse than death?
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van der Worp HB and Greving JP
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- 2010
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22. Predicting outcome after acute basilar artery occlusion based on admission characteristics.
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He Y, Li T, Schonewille WJ, Greving JP, Kappelle LJ, and Algra A
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- 2012
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23. Statin treatment for primary prevention of vascular disease: whom to treat? Cost-effectiveness analysis
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Greving, JP, Visseren, FLJ, de Wit, GA, and Algra, A
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OBJECTIVE: To assess the cost-effectiveness of low dose statins for primary prevention of vascular disease, incorporating current prices, non-adherence (reduced clinical efficacy while maintaining healthcare costs), and the results of the recently published JUPITER trial. Design Cost-effectiveness analysis using a Markov model. Sensitivity analyses and Monte Carlo simulation evaluated the robustness of the results. Setting Primary care in The Netherlands. Participants Hypothetical populations of men and women aged 45 to 75 years without a history of vascular disease at different levels of risk for vascular disease (myocardial infarction and stroke) over 10 years. Interventions Low dose statin treatment daily versus no treatment for 10 years. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Number of fatal and nonfatal vascular events prevented, quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), costs, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios over 10 years. RESULTS: Over a 10-year period, statin treatment cost €35 000 (£30 000, $49 000) per QALY gained for men aged 55 years with a 10-year vascular risk of 10%. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio improved as risk for vascular disease increased. The cost per QALY ranged from approximately €5000 to €125 000 when the 10-year vascular risk for men aged 55 years was varied from 25% to 5%. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio slightly decreased with age after the level of vascular risk was specified. Results were sensitive to the costs of statin treatment, statin effectiveness, non-adherence, disutility of taking medication daily, and the time horizon of the model. CONCLUSIONS: In daily practice, statin treatment seemed not to be cost-effective for primary prevention in populations at low risk of vascular disease, despite low costs of generic drug pills. Adherence to statin treatment needs to be improved to enhance the cost-effectiveness of the use of statins for primary prevention.
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- 2011
24. Sex differences in cognitive functioning in patients with heart failure.
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Kuipers S, Kappelle LJ, Greving JP, Amier RP, de Bresser J, Bron EE, Leeuwis AE, Marcks N, den Ruijter HM, Biessels GJ, and Exalto LG
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Background: Cognitive impairment is common in patients with heart failure (HF) and impacts patients' life. Sex differences in HF-characteristics are well-established. We hypothesized that women and men with HF also differ in cognitive functioning and that this may be related to sex differences in HF-characteristics and vascular brain injury., Methods: In the Heart-Brain Connection Study, 162 clinically stable HF patients (mean age 69.7 ± 10.0, 33 % women) underwent neuropsychological assessments and brain-MRI. Test results were standardized into z-scores for memory, language, attention/speed, executive functioning, and global cognition. Using linear models adjusted for age and education, we calculated sex differences (women-to-men: W-M∆) in cognitive functioning and examined effects of HF- and vascular brain injury-characteristics on these differences., Results: Men more often had an ischemic cause of HF and lower NYHA-classes, whereas women more often had preserved left ventricular ejection fractions (LVEF). Women had a higher volume of white matter hyperintensities (WMHs) whereas non-lacunar infarcts and microbleeds were more prevalent in men. Women performed better on global cognition than men (W-M∆ in z-score 0.20, 95 %CI 0.03-0.37), predominantly on memory (0.40, 0.02-0.78). These differences were associated with ischemic HF-etiology, as adjustment attenuated these sex differences. After adjustment for non-lacunar infarcts, global cognition difference persisted, but the difference in memory functioning attenuated. Adjustments for NYHA-class, LVEF, WMHs, and microbleeds did not change the results., Conclusion: Women and men with HF differ in cognitive functioning, predominantly in memory functioning, these differences were related to some sex differences in HF-characteristics and vascular brain injury, but not to all., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None declared., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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25. Aneurysm Prevalence and Quality of Life During Screening in Relatives of Patients With Unruptured Intracranial Aneurysms: A Prospective Study.
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Mensing LA, van Tuijl RJ, Greving JP, Velthuis BK, van der Schaaf IC, Wermer MJH, Verbaan D, Vandertop WP, Zuithoff NPA, Rinkel GJE, and Ruigrok YM
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- Humans, Prospective Studies, Quality of Life, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Intracranial Aneurysm diagnostic imaging, Intracranial Aneurysm epidemiology, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage diagnostic imaging, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage epidemiology
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Background and Objectives: Screening for unruptured intracranial aneurysms (UIAs) is effective for first-degree relatives (FDRs) of patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH). Whether screening is also effective for FDRs of patients with UIA is unknown. We determined the yield of screening in such FDRs, assessed rupture risk and treatment decisions of aneurysms that were found, identified potential high-risk subgroups, and studied the effects of screening on quality of life (QoL)., Methods: In this prospective cohort study, we included FDRs, aged 20-70 years, of patients with UIA without a family history of aSAH who visited the Neurology outpatient clinic in 1 of 3 participating tertiary referral centers in the Netherlands. FDRs were screened for UIA with magnetic resonance angiography between 2017 and 2021. We determined UIA prevalence and developed a prediction model for UIA risk at screening using multivariable logistic regression. QoL was evaluated with questionnaires 6 times during the first year after screening and assessed with a linear mixed-effects model., Results: We detected 24 UIAs in 23 of 461 screened FDRs, resulting in a 5.0% prevalence (95% CI 3.2-7.4). The median aneurysm size was 3 mm (interquartile range [IQR] 2-4 mm), and the median 5-year rupture risk assessed with the PHASES score was 0.7% (IQR 0.4%-0.9%). All UIAs received follow-up imaging, and none were treated preventively. After a median follow-up of 24 months (IQR 13-38 months), no UIA had changed. Predicted UIA risk at screening ranged between 2.3% and 14.7% with the highest risk in FDRs who smoke and have excessive alcohol consumption ( c -statistic: 0.76; 95% CI 0.65-0.88). At all survey moments, health-related QoL and emotional functioning were comparable with those in a reference group from the general population. One FDR with a positive screening result expressed regret about screening., Discussion: Based on the current data, we do not advise screening FDRs of patients with UIA because all identified UIAs had a low rupture risk. We observed no negative effect of screening on QoL. A longer follow-up should determine the risk of aneurysm growth requiring preventive treatment., (© 2023 American Academy of Neurology.)
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- 2023
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26. Lower haemoglobin concentrations are associated with impaired cognition in patients with carotid artery occlusion.
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Kuipers S, Willemse SW, Greving JP, Bron EE, van Oostenbrugge RJ, van Osch MJP, Biessels GJ, and Kappelle LJ
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Background: Patients with carotid artery occlusion (CAO) are vulnerable to cognitive impairment (CI). Anaemia is associated with CI in the general population. We hypothesized that lower haemoglobin is associated with cognitive impairment (CI) in patients with CAO and that this association is accentuated by cerebral blood flow (CBF)., Methods: 104 patients (mean age 66±8 years, 77% men) with complete CAO from the Heart-Brain Connection study were included. Anaemia was defined as haemoglobin < 12 g/dL for women and < 13 g/dL for men. Cognitive test results were standardized into z-scores (using a reference group) in four cognitive domains. Patients were classified as cognitively impaired when ≥ one domain was impaired. The association between lower haemoglobin and both cognitive domain z-scores and the presence of CI was assessed with adjusted (age, sex, education and ischaemic stroke) regression models. Total CBF (measured with phase contrast MRI) and the interaction term haemoglobin*CBF were additionally added to the analyses., Results: Anaemia was present in 6 (6%) patients and was associated with CI (RR 2.54, 95% CI 1.36; 4.76). Lower haemoglobin was associated with the presence of CI (RR per minus 1 g/dL haemoglobin 1.15, 95% CI 1.02; 1.30). This association was strongest for the attention-psychomotor speed domain (RR for impaired attention-psychomotor speed functioning per minus 1 g/dL haemoglobin 1.27, 95% CI 1.09;1.47) and ß for attention-psychomotor speed z-scores per minus 1 g/dL haemoglobin -0.19, 95% CI -0.33; -0.05). Adjustment for CBF did not affect these results and we found no interaction between haemoglobin and CBF in relation to cognition., Conclusion: Lower haemoglobin concentrations are associated with CI in patients with complete CAO, particularly in the domain attention-psychomotor speed. CBF did not accentuate this association. If validated in longitudinal studies, haemoglobin might be a viable target to prevent cognitive deterioration in patients with CAO., Competing Interests: M.J.P. van Osch receives research support from Philips., (© 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2023
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27. Risk Prediction of New Intracranial Aneurysms at Follow-Up Screening in People With a Positive Family History.
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Zuurbier CCM, Bourcier R, Constant Dit Beaufils P, Redon R, Desal H, Bor ASE, Rinkel GJE, Greving JP, and Ruigrok YM
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- Humans, Female, Male, Follow-Up Studies, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Intracranial Aneurysm epidemiology, Intracranial Aneurysm genetics, Intracranial Aneurysm diagnosis, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage epidemiology, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage genetics, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: In first-degree relatives of patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH), the risk of an intracranial aneurysm can be predicted at initial screening but not at follow-up screening. We aimed to develop a model for predicting the probability of a new intracranial aneurysm after initial screening in people with a positive family history of aSAH., Methods: In a prospective study, we obtained data from follow-up screening for aneurysms of 499 subjects with ≥2 affected first-degree relatives. Screening took place at the University Medical Center Utrecht, the Netherlands, and the University Hospital of Nantes, France. We studied associations between potential predictors and the presence of aneurysms using Cox regression analysis and the predictive performance at 5, 10, and 15 years after initial screening using C statistics and calibration plots, while correcting for overfitting., Results: In 5050 person-years of follow-up, intracranial aneurysms were found in 52 subjects. The risk of aneurysm at 5 years was 2% to 12%, at 10 years, 4% to 28%, and at 15 years, 7% to 40%. Predictors were female sex, history of intracranial aneurysms/aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage, and older age. The sex, previous history of intracranial aneurysm/aSAH, older age score had a C statistic of 0.70 (95% CI, 0.61-0.78) at 5 years, 0.71 (95% CI, 0.64-0.78) at 10 years, and 0.70 (95% CI, 0.63-0.76) at 15 years and showed good calibration., Conclusions: The sex, previous history of intracranial aneurysm/aSAH, older age score provides risk estimates for finding new intracranial aneurysms at 5, 10, and 15 years after initial screening, based on 3 easily retrievable predictors; this can help to define a personalized screening strategy after initial screening in people with a positive family history for aSAH.
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- 2023
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28. A Delphi consensus checklist helped assess the need to develop rapid guideline recommendations.
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Kok-Pigge AC, Greving JP, de Groot JF, Oerbekke M, Kuijpers T, and Burgers JS
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- Humans, Delphi Technique, Consensus, Surveys and Questionnaires, Checklist methods
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Background and Objectives: We aimed to develop a checklist to aid guideline developers in determining which scientific or societal cause ("triggers") are relevant when considering to initiate a rapid recommendation procedure., Methods: We conducted a two-round modified Delphi procedure with a panel of Dutch guideline experts, clinicians, and patient representatives. A previously conducted systematic literature review and semistructured interviews with four science journalists were used to generate a list of potential items. This item list was submitted to the panel for discussion, reduction and refinement into a checklist., Results: Thirteen experts took part. Two questionnaires were completed in which participants scored an initial list of 64 items based on relevance. During two online meetings, the scores were discussed, irrelevant items were removed, and relevant items were reformulated into seven questions. The final "quickscan assessment of the need for a rapid recommendation" covers user perspective, scientific evidence, clinical relevance, clinical practice variation, applicability, quality of care and public health outcomes, and ethical/legal considerations., Conclusion: The quickscan aids guideline developers in systematically assessing whether a trigger expresses a valid need for developing a rapid recommendation. Future research could focus on the applicability and validity of the checklist within guideline development programs., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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29. Development of a questionnaire to identify persons with a family history of aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage.
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Zuurbier CC, Greving JP, Rinkel GJ, and Ruigrok YM
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- Humans, Child, Pilot Projects, Surveys and Questionnaires, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage diagnosis, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage genetics, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage epidemiology, Stroke diagnosis, Stroke genetics, Intracranial Aneurysm epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Preventive screening for intracranial aneurysms is effective in persons with a positive family history of aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH), but for many relatives of aSAH patients, it can be difficult to assess whether their relative had an aSAH or another type of stroke., Aim: We aimed to develop a family history questionnaire for people in the population who believe they have a first-degree relative who had a stroke and to assess its accuracy to identify relatives of aSAH patients., Methods: A questionnaire to distinguish between aSAH and other stroke types (ischemic stroke and intracerebral hemorrhage) was developed by a team of clinicians and consumers. The level of agreement between the questionnaire outcome and medical diagnosis was pilot tested in 30 previously admitted aSAH patients. Next, the sensitivity and specificity of the questionnaire were assessed in 91 first-degree relatives (siblings/children) of previously admitted stroke patients., Results: All 30 aSAH patients were identified by the questionnaire in the pilot study; 29 of 30 first-degree relatives of aSAH patients were correctly identified. The questionnaire had a sensitivity of 97% (95% confidence interval (CI) = 83-100%) and a specificity of 93% (95% CI = 84-98%) when tested in the first-degree relatives of stroke patients., Conclusion: Our questionnaire can help persons to discriminate an aSAH from other types of stroke in their affected relative. This family history questionnaire is developed in the Netherlands but could also be used in other countries after validation.
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- 2022
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30. Development of the SAFETEA Scores for Predicting Risks of Complications of Preventive Endovascular or Microneurosurgical Intracranial Aneurysm Occlusion.
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Algra AM, Greving JP, de Winkel J, Kurtelius A, Laban K, Verbaan D, van den Berg R, Vandertop W, Lindgren A, Krings T, Woo PYM, Wong GKC, Roozenbeek B, van Es ACGM, Dammers R, Etminan N, Boogaarts H, van Doormaal T, van der Zwan A, van der Schaaf IC, Rinkel GJE, and Vergouwen MDI
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- Humans, Cohort Studies, Treatment Outcome, Retrospective Studies, Intracranial Aneurysm complications, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage surgery, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage complications, Embolization, Therapeutic adverse effects, Endovascular Procedures adverse effects, Aneurysm, Ruptured surgery, Aneurysm, Ruptured complications
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Preventive unruptured intracranial aneurysm (UIA) occlusion can reduce the risk of subarachnoid hemorrhage, but both endovascular and microneurosurgical treatment carry a risk of serious complications. To improve individualized management decisions, we developed risk scores for complications of endovascular and microneurosurgical treatment based on easily retrievable patient, aneurysm, and treatment characteristics., Methods: For this multicenter cohort study, we combined individual patient data from patients with UIA aged 18 years or older undergoing preventive endovascular treatment (standard, balloon-assisted or stent-assisted coiling, Woven EndoBridge-device, or flow-diverting stent) or microneurosurgical clipping at one of the 10 participating centers from 3 continents between 2000 and 2018. The primary outcome was death from any cause or clinical deterioration from neurologic complications ≤30 days. We selected predictors based on previous knowledge about relevant risk factors and predictor performance and studied the association between predictors and complications with logistic regression. We assessed model performance with calibration plots and concordance ( c ) statistics., Results: Of the 1,282 included patients, 94 (7.3%) had neurologic symptoms that resolved <30 days, 140 (10.9%) had persisting neurologic symptoms, and 6 died (0.5%). At 30 days, 52 patients (4.1%) were dead or dependent. Predictors of procedural complications were size of aneurysm, aneurysm location, familial subarachnoid hemorrhage, earlier atherosclerotic disease, treatment volume, endovascular modality (for endovascular treatment) or extra aneurysm configuration factors (for microneurosurgical treatment, branching artery from aneurysm neck or unfavorable dome-to-neck ratio), and age (acronym: SAFETEA). For endovascular treatment (n = 752), the c -statistic was 0.72 (95% CI 0.67-0.77) and the absolute complication risk ranged from 3.2% (95% CI 1.6%-14.9%; ≤1 point) to 33.1% (95% CI 25.4%-41.5%; ≥6 points). For microneurosurgical treatment (n = 530), the c -statistic was 0.72 (95% CI 0.67-0.77) and the complication risk ranged from 4.9% (95% CI 1.5%-14.9%; ≤1 point) to 49.9% (95% CI 39.4%-60.6%; ≥6 points)., Discussion: The SAFETEA risk scores for endovascular and microneurosurgical treatment are based on 7 easily retrievable risk factors to predict the absolute risk of procedural complications in patients with UIAs. The scores need external validation before the predicted risks can be properly used to support decision-making in clinical practice., Classification of Evidence: This study provides Class III evidence that SAFETEA scores predict the risk of procedural complications after endovascular and microneurosurgical treatment of unruptured intracranial aneurysms., (© 2022 American Academy of Neurology.)
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- 2022
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31. Quality of Life Outcomes Over Time in Patients With Unruptured Intracranial Aneurysms With and Without Preventive Occlusion: A Prospective Cohort Study.
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Algra AM, Greving JP, Wermer MJH, van Walderveen MAA, van der Schaaf IC, van der Zwan A, Visser-Meily JMA, Rinkel GJE, and Vergouwen MDI
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- Humans, Adolescent, Adult, Prospective Studies, Anxiety psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Quality of Life, Intracranial Aneurysm complications
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Background and Objectives: In counseling patients with an unruptured intracranial aneurysm (UIA), quality of life (QoL) outcomes are important for informed decision making. We evaluated QoL outcomes in patients with and without preventive aneurysm occlusion at multiple time points during the first year after UIA diagnosis and studied predictors of QoL outcomes., Methods: We performed a prospective cohort study in patients aged ≥18 years with a newly diagnosed UIA in 2 tertiary referral centers in the Netherlands between 2017 and 2019. Patients were sent QoL questionnaires at 7 (aneurysm occlusion) or 5 (no occlusion) moments during the first year after diagnosis. We collected baseline data on patient and aneurysm characteristics, passive coping style (Utrecht Coping List), occlusion modality, and neurologic complications. We assessed health-related QoL (HRQoL) with the EuroQol 5 dimensions (EQ-5D), emotional functioning with the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), and restrictions in daily activities with the Utrecht Scale for Evaluation of Rehabilitation-Participation (USER-P). We used a linear mixed-effects model to assess the course of QoL over time and to explore predictors of QoL outcomes., Results: Of 153 eligible patients, 99 (65%) participated, of whom 30/99 (30%) underwent preventive occlusion. Patients undergoing occlusion reported higher baseline levels of passive coping, anxiety and depression, and restrictions than patients without occlusion. During recovery after occlusion, patients reported more restrictions compared with baseline (adjusted USER-P decrease 1 month post occlusion: -12.8 [95% CI -23.8 to -1.9]). HRQoL and emotional functioning gradually improved after occlusion (EQ-5D increase at 1 year: 8.6 [95% CI 0.1-17.0] and HADS decrease at 1 year: -5.4 [95% CI -9.4 to -1.5]). In patients without occlusion, the largest HRQoL improvement occurred directly after visiting the outpatient aneurysm clinic (EQ-5D increase: 9.2 [95% CI 5.5-12.8]). At 1 year, QoL outcomes were comparable in patients with and without occlusion. Factors associated with worse QoL outcomes were a passive coping style in all patients, complications in patients with occlusion, and higher rupture risks in patients without occlusion., Discussion: After UIA diagnosis, QoL improves gradually after preventive occlusion and directly after counseling at the outpatient clinic in patients without occlusion, resulting in comparable 1-year QoL outcomes. A passive coping style is an important predictor of poor QoL outcomes in all patients with UIA., (© 2022 American Academy of Neurology.)
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- 2022
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32. Risk evaluation of cognitive impairment in patients with heart failure: A call for action.
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Kuipers S, Greving JP, Brunner-La Rocca HP, Gottesman RF, van Oostenbrugge RJ, Williams NL, Jan Biessels G, and Jaap Kappelle L
- Abstract
Background: Cognitive impairment (CI) is common in patients with heart failure (HF) and impacts treatment adherence and other aspects of patient life in HF. Recognition of CI in patients with HF is therefore important. We aimed to develop a risk model with easily available patient characteristics, to identify patients with HF who are at high risk to be cognitively impaired and in need for further cognitive investigation., Methods & Results: The risk model was developed in 611 patients ≥ 60 years with HF from the TIME-CHF trial. Fifty-six (9 %) patients had CI (defined as Hodkinson Abbreviated Mental Test ≤ 7). We assessed the association between potential predictors and CI with least-absolute-shrinkage-and-selection-operator (LASSO) regression analysis. The selected predictors were: older age, female sex, NYHA class III or IV, Charlson comorbidity index ≥ 6, anemia, heart rate ≥ 70 bpm and systolic blood pressure ≥ 145 mmHg. A model that combined these variables had a c-statistic of 0.70 (0.63-0.78). The model was validated in 155 patients ≥ 60 years with HF from the ECHO study. In the validation cohort 51 (33 %) patients had CI (defined as a Mini Mental State Exam ≤ 24). External validation showed an AUC of 0.56 (0.46-0.66)., Conclusions: This risk model with easily available patient characteristics has poor predictive performance in external validation, which may be due to case-mix variation. These findings underscore the need for active screening and standardized assessment for CI in patients with HF., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2022 The Authors.)
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- 2022
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33. Number of Affected Relatives, Age, Smoking, and Hypertension Prediction Score for Intracranial Aneurysms in Persons With a Family History for Subarachnoid Hemorrhage.
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Zuurbier CCM, Bourcier R, Constant Dit Beaufils P, Redon R, Desal H, Bor ASE, Lindgren AE, Rinkel GJE, Greving JP, and Ruigrok YM
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- Humans, Risk Factors, Smoking epidemiology, Hypertension complications, Hypertension epidemiology, Intracranial Aneurysm complications, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Persons with a positive family history of aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage are at increased risk of aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage. Preventive screening for intracranial aneurysms (IAs) in these persons is cost-effective but not very efficient. We aimed to develop and externally validate a model for predicting the probability of an IA at first screening in persons with a positive family history of aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage., Methods: For model development, we studied results from initial screening for IA in 660 prospectively collected persons with ≥2 affected first-degree relatives screened at the University Medical Center Utrecht. For validation, we studied results from 258 prospectively collected persons screened in the University Hospital of Nantes. We assessed potential predictors of IA presence in multivariable logistic regression analysis. Predictive performance was assessed with the C statistic and a calibration plot and corrected for overfitting., Results: IA were present in 79 (12%) persons in the development cohort. Predictors were number of affected relatives, age, smoking, and hypertension (NASH). The NASH score had a C statistic of 0.68 (95% CI, 0.62-0.74) and showed good calibration in the development data. Predicted probabilities of an IA at first screening varied from 5% in persons aged 20 to 30 years with two affected relatives, without hypertension who never smoked, up to 36% in persons aged 60 to 70 years with ≥3 affected relatives, who have hypertension and smoke(d). In the external validation data IA were present in 67 (26%) persons, the model had a C statistic of 0.64 (95% CI, 0.57-0.71) and slightly underestimated IAs risk., Conclusions: For persons with ≥2 affected first-degree relatives, the NASH score improves current predictions and provides risk estimates for an IA at first screening between 5% and 36% based on 4 easily retrievable predictors. With the information such persons can now make a better informed decision about whether or not to undergo preventive screening.
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- 2022
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34. Sex Difference and Rupture Rate of Intracranial Aneurysms: An Individual Patient Data Meta-Analysis.
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Zuurbier CCM, Molenberg R, Mensing LA, Wermer MJH, Juvela S, Lindgren AE, Jääskeläinen JE, Koivisto T, Yamazaki T, Uyttenboogaart M, van Dijk JMC, Aalbers MW, Morita A, Tominari S, Arai H, Nozaki K, Murayama Y, Ishibashi T, Takao H, Gondar R, Bijlenga P, Rinkel GJE, Greving JP, and Ruigrok YM
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Aged, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Sex Factors, Smoking epidemiology, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage complications, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage epidemiology, Aneurysm, Ruptured epidemiology, Intracranial Aneurysm complications, Intracranial Aneurysm epidemiology
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: In previous studies, women had a higher risk of rupture of intracranial aneurysms than men, but female sex was not an independent risk factor. This may be explained by a higher prevalence of patient- or aneurysm-related risk factors for rupture in women than in men or by insufficient power of previous studies. We assessed sex differences in rupture rate taking into account other patient- and aneurysm-related risk factors for aneurysmal rupture., Methods: We searched Embase and Pubmed for articles published until December 1, 2020. Cohorts with available individual patient data were included in our meta-analysis. We compared rupture rates of women versus men using a Cox proportional hazard regression model adjusted for the PHASES score (Population, Hypertension, Age, Size of Aneurysm, Earlier Subarachnoid Hemorrhage From Another Aneurysm, Site of Aneurysm), smoking, and a positive family history of aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage., Results: We pooled individual patient data from 9 cohorts totaling 9940 patients (6555 women, 66%) with 12 193 unruptured intracranial aneurysms, and 24 357 person-years follow-up. Rupture occurred in 163 women (rupture rate 1.04%/person-years [95% CI, 0.89-1.21]) and 63 men (rupture rate 0.74%/person-years [95% CI, 0.58-0.94]). Women were older (61.9 versus 59.5 years), were less often smokers (20% versus 44%), more often had internal carotid artery aneurysms (24% versus 17%), and larger sized aneurysms (≥7 mm, 24% versus 23%) than men. The unadjusted women-to-men hazard ratio was 1.43 (95% CI, 1.07-1.93) and the adjusted women/men ratio was 1.39 (95% CI, 1.02-1.90)., Conclusions: Women have a higher risk of aneurysmal rupture than men and this sex difference is not explained by differences in patient- and aneurysm-related risk factors for aneurysmal rupture. Future studies should focus on the factors explaining the higher risk of aneurysmal rupture in women.
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- 2022
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35. External Validation of Risk Prediction Models to Improve Selection of Patients for Carotid Endarterectomy.
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Poorthuis MHF, Herings RAR, Dansey K, Damen JAA, Greving JP, Schermerhorn ML, and de Borst GJ
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- Carotid Stenosis diagnosis, Endarterectomy, Carotid methods, Humans, Predictive Value of Tests, Risk Assessment methods, Risk Assessment standards, Carotid Stenosis surgery, Clinical Trials as Topic standards, Endarterectomy, Carotid standards, Models, Theoretical, Patient Selection, Registries standards
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: The net benefit of carotid endarterectomy (CEA) is determined partly by the risk of procedural stroke or death. Current guidelines recommend CEA if 30-day risks are <6% for symptomatic stenosis and <3% for asymptomatic stenosis. We aimed to identify prediction models for procedural stroke or death after CEA and to externally validate these models in a large registry of patients from the United States., Methods: We conducted a systematic search in MEDLINE and EMBASE for prediction models of procedural outcomes after CEA. We validated these models with data from patients who underwent CEA in the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (2011-2017). We assessed discrimination using C statistics and calibration graphically. We determined the number of patients with predicted risks that exceeded recommended thresholds of procedural risks to perform CEA., Results: After screening 788 reports, 15 studies describing 17 prediction models were included. Nine were developed in populations including both asymptomatic and symptomatic patients, 2 in symptomatic and 5 in asymptomatic populations. In the external validation cohort of 26 293 patients who underwent CEA, 702 (2.7%) developed a stroke or died within 30-days. C statistics varied between 0.52 and 0.64 using all patients, between 0.51 and 0.59 using symptomatic patients, and between 0.49 to 0.58 using asymptomatic patients. The Ontario Carotid Endarterectomy Registry model that included symptomatic status, diabetes, heart failure, and contralateral occlusion as predictors, had C statistic of 0.64 and the best concordance between predicted and observed risks. This model identified 4.5% of symptomatic and 2.1% of asymptomatic patients with procedural risks that exceeded recommended thresholds., Conclusions: Of the 17 externally validated prediction models, the Ontario Carotid Endarterectomy Registry risk model had most reliable predictions of procedural stroke or death after CEA and can inform patients about procedural hazards and help focus CEA toward patients who would benefit most from it.
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- 2022
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36. Difference in Rupture Risk Between Familial and Sporadic Intracranial Aneurysms: An Individual Patient Data Meta-analysis.
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Zuurbier CCM, Mensing LA, Wermer MJH, Juvela S, Lindgren AE, Koivisto T, Jääskeläinen JE, Yamazaki T, Molenberg R, van Dijk JMC, Uyttenboogaart M, Aalbers M, Morita A, Tominari S, Arai H, Nozaki K, Murayama Y, Ishibashi T, Takao H, Rinkel GJE, Greving JP, and Ruigrok YM
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- Child, Humans, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Aneurysm, Ruptured epidemiology, Intracranial Aneurysm diagnosis, Intracranial Aneurysm epidemiology, Intracranial Aneurysm genetics, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage epidemiology, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage genetics
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Background and Objectives: We combined individual patient data (IPD) from prospective cohorts of patients with unruptured intracranial aneurysms (UIAs) to assess to what extent patients with familial UIA have a higher rupture risk than those with sporadic UIA., Methods: For this IPD meta-analysis, we performed an Embase and PubMed search for studies published up to December 1, 2020. We included studies that (1) had a prospective study design; (2) included 50 or more patients with UIA; (3) studied the natural course of UIA and risk factors for aneurysm rupture including family history for aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage and UIA; and (4) had aneurysm rupture as an outcome. Cohorts with available IPD were included. All studies included patients with newly diagnosed UIA visiting one of the study centers. The primary outcome was aneurysmal rupture. Patients with polycystic kidney disease and moyamoya disease were excluded. We compared rupture rates of familial vs sporadic UIA using a Cox proportional hazard regression model adjusted for PHASES score and smoking. We performed 2 analyses: (1) only studies defining first-degree relatives as parents, children, and siblings and (2) all studies, including those in which first-degree relatives are defined as only parents and children, but not siblings., Results: We pooled IPD from 8 cohorts with a low and moderate risk of bias. First-degree relatives were defined as parents, siblings, and children in 6 cohorts (29% Dutch, 55% Finnish, 15% Japanese), totaling 2,297 patients (17% familial, 399 patients) with 3,089 UIAs and 7,301 person-years follow-up. Rupture occurred in 10 familial cases (rupture rate: 0.89%/person-year; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.45-1.59) and 41 sporadic cases (0.66%/person-year; 95% CI 0.48-0.89); adjusted hazard ratio (HR) for familial cases 2.56 (95% CI 1.18-5.56). After adding the 2 cohorts excluding siblings as first-degree relatives, resulting in 9,511 patients, the adjusted HR was 1.44 (95% CI 0.86-2.40)., Discussion: The risk of rupture of UIA is 2.5 times higher, with a range from a 1.2 to 5 times higher risk, in familial than in sporadic UIA. When assessing the risk of rupture in UIA, family history should be taken into account., (© 2021 American Academy of Neurology.)
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- 2021
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37. Balancing Benefits and Risks of Long-Term Antiplatelet Therapy in Noncardioembolic Transient Ischemic Attack or Stroke.
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Hilkens NA, Algra A, Diener HC, Bath PM, Csiba L, Hacke W, Kappelle LJ, Koudstaal PJ, Leys D, Mas JL, Sacco RL, and Greving JP
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- Aspirin therapeutic use, Clopidogrel therapeutic use, Dipyridamole therapeutic use, Drug Therapy, Combination, Humans, Intracranial Hemorrhages epidemiology, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Recurrence, Risk Assessment, Ticlopidine therapeutic use, Treatment Outcome, Ischemic Attack, Transient prevention & control, Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors adverse effects, Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors therapeutic use, Stroke prevention & control
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: Lifelong treatment with antiplatelet drugs is recommended following a transient ischemic attack or ischemic stroke. Bleeding complications may offset the benefit of antiplatelet drugs in patients at increased risk of bleeding and low risk of recurrent ischemic events. We aimed to investigate the net benefit of antiplatelet treatment according to an individuals’ bleeding risk., Methods: We pooled individual patient data from 6 randomized clinical trials (CAPRIE [Clopidogrel Versus Aspirin in Patients at Risk of Ischemic Events], ESPS-2 [European Stroke Prevention Study-2], MATCH [Management of Atherothrombosis With Clopidogrel in High-Risk Patients], CHARISMA [Clopidogrel for High Atherothrombotic Risk and Ischemic Stabilization, Management, and Avoidance], ESPRIT [European/Australasian Stroke Prevention in Reversible Ischemia Trial], and PRoFESS [Prevention Regimen for Effectively Avoiding Second Strokes]) investigating antiplatelet therapy in the subacute or chronic phase after noncardioembolic transient ischemic attack or stroke. Patients were stratified into quintiles according to their predicted risk of major bleeding with the S2TOP-BLEED score. The annual risk of major bleeding and recurrent ischemic events was assessed per quintile for 4 scenarios: (1) aspirin monotherapy, (2) aspirin-clopidogrel versus aspirin or clopidogrel monotherapy, (3) aspirin-dipyridamole versus clopidogrel, and (4) aspirin versus clopidogrel. Net benefit was calculated for the second, third, and fourth scenario., Results: Thirty seven thousand eighty-seven patients were included in the analyses. Both risk of major bleeding and recurrent ischemic events increased over quintiles of predicted bleeding risk, but risk of ischemic events was consistently higher (eg, from 0.7%/y (bottom quintile) to 3.2%/y (top quintile) for major bleeding on aspirin and from 2.5%/y to 10.2%/y for risk of ischemic events on aspirin). Treatment with aspirin-clopidogrel led to more major bleedings (0.9%–1.7% per year), than reduction in ischemic events (ranging from 0.4% to 0.9/1.0% per year) across all quintiles. There was no clear preference for either aspirin-dipyridamole or clopidogrel according to baseline bleeding risk., Conclusions: Among patients with a transient ischemic attack or ischemic stroke included in clinical trials of antiplatelet therapy, the risk of recurrent ischemic events and of major bleeding increase in parallel. Antiplatelet treatment cannot be individualized solely based on bleeding risk assessment.
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- 2021
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38. Dementia risk in the general population: large-scale external validation of prediction models in the AGES-Reykjavik study.
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Vonk JMJ, Greving JP, Gudnason V, Launer LJ, and Geerlings MI
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- Female, Humans, Male, Netherlands epidemiology, Predictive Value of Tests, Reproducibility of Results, Risk Factors, Dementia diagnosis, Dementia epidemiology, Population Surveillance methods, Risk Assessment methods
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We aimed to evaluate the external performance of prediction models for all-cause dementia or AD in the general population, which can aid selection of high-risk individuals for clinical trials and prevention. We identified 17 out of 36 eligible published prognostic models for external validation in the population-based AGES-Reykjavik Study. Predictive performance was assessed with c statistics and calibration plots. All five models with a c statistic > .75 (.76-.81) contained cognitive testing as a predictor, while all models with lower c statistics (.67-.75) did not. Calibration ranged from good to poor across all models, including systematic risk overestimation or overestimation for particularly the highest risk group. Models that overestimate risk may be acceptable for exclusion purposes, but lack the ability to accurately identify individuals at higher dementia risk. Both updating existing models or developing new models aimed at identifying high-risk individuals, as well as more external validation studies of dementia prediction models are warranted., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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39. Detection of asymptomatic carotid stenosis in patients with lower-extremity arterial disease: development and external validations of a risk score.
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Poorthuis MHF, Morris DR, de Borst GJ, Bots ML, Greving JP, Visseren FLJ, Sherliker P, Clack R, Clarke R, Lewington S, Bulbulia R, and Halliday A
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- Carotid Stenosis complications, Chronic Limb-Threatening Ischemia complications, Humans, Patient Compliance, Risk Factors, Asymptomatic Diseases, Carotid Stenosis diagnosis, Chronic Limb-Threatening Ischemia diagnosis, Lower Extremity blood supply, Mass Screening methods
- Abstract
Background: Recommendations for screening patients with lower-extremity arterial disease (LEAD) to detect asymptomatic carotid stenosis (ACS) are conflicting. Prediction models might identify patients at high risk of ACS, possibly allowing targeted screening to improve preventive therapy and compliance., Methods: A systematic search for prediction models for at least 50 per cent ACS in patients with LEAD was conducted. A prediction model in screened patients from the USA with an ankle : brachial pressure index of 0.9 or less was subsequently developed, and assessed for discrimination and calibration. External validation was performed in two independent cohorts, from the UK and the Netherlands., Results: After screening 4907 studies, no previously published prediction models were found. For development of a new model, data for 112 117 patients were used, of whom 6354 (5.7 per cent) had at least 50 per cent ACS and 2801 (2.5 per cent) had at least 70 per cent ACS. Age, sex, smoking status, history of hypercholesterolaemia, stroke/transient ischaemic attack, coronary heart disease and measured systolic BP were predictors of ACS. The model discrimination had an area under the receiver operating characteristic (AUROC) curve of 0.71 (95 per cent c.i. 0.71 to 0.72) for at least 50 per cent ACS and 0.73 (0.72 to 0.73) for at least 70 per cent ACS. Screening the 20 per cent of patients at greatest risk detected 12.4 per cent with at least 50 per cent ACS (number needed to screen (NNS) 8] and 5.8 per cent with at least 70 per cent ACS (NNS 17). This yielded 44.2 and 46.9 per cent of patients with at least 50 and 70 per cent ACS respectively. External validation showed reliable discrimination and adequate calibration., Conclusion: The present risk score can predict significant ACS in patients with LEAD. This approach may inform targeted screening of high-risk individuals to enhance the detection of ACS., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of BJS Society Ltd.)
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- 2021
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40. Prediction of long-term recurrent ischemic stroke: the added value of non-contrast CT, CT perfusion, and CT angiography.
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Kauw F, Greving JP, Takx RAP, de Jong HWAM, Schonewille WJ, Vos JA, Wermer MJH, van Walderveen MAA, Kappelle LJ, Velthuis BK, and Dankbaar JW
- Subjects
- Computed Tomography Angiography, Humans, Male, Perfusion, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Brain Ischemia diagnostic imaging, Ischemic Stroke, Stroke diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this study was to evaluate whether the addition of brain CT imaging data to a model incorporating clinical risk factors improves prediction of ischemic stroke recurrence over 5 years of follow-up., Methods: A total of 638 patients with ischemic stroke from three centers were selected from the Dutch acute stroke study (DUST). CT-derived candidate predictors included findings on non-contrast CT, CT perfusion, and CT angiography. Five-year follow-up data were extracted from medical records. We developed a multivariable Cox regression model containing clinical predictors and an extended model including CT-derived predictors by applying backward elimination. We calculated net reclassification improvement and integrated discrimination improvement indices. Discrimination was evaluated with the optimism-corrected c-statistic and calibration with a calibration plot., Results: During 5 years of follow-up, 56 patients (9%) had a recurrence. The c-statistic of the clinical model, which contained male sex, history of hyperlipidemia, and history of stroke or transient ischemic attack, was 0.61. Compared with the clinical model, the extended model, which contained previous cerebral infarcts on non-contrast CT and Alberta Stroke Program Early CT score greater than 7 on mean transit time maps derived from CT perfusion, had higher discriminative performance (c-statistic 0.65, P = 0.01). Inclusion of these CT variables led to a significant improvement in reclassification measures, by using the net reclassification improvement and integrated discrimination improvement indices., Conclusion: Data from CT imaging significantly improved the discriminatory performance and reclassification in predicting ischemic stroke recurrence beyond a model incorporating clinical risk factors only.
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- 2021
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41. Management decisions on unruptured intracranial aneurysms before and after implementation of the PHASES score.
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Hollands LJ, Vergouwen MDI, Greving JP, Wermer MJH, Rinkel GJE, and Algra AM
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- Humans, Netherlands epidemiology, Intracranial Aneurysm epidemiology, Intracranial Aneurysm therapy
- Abstract
Background: In management decisions on saccular unruptured intracranial aneurysms (UIAs) the risk of rupture is an important factor. The PHASES score, introduced in 2014, provides absolute 5-year risks of rupture based on six easily retrievable patient and aneurysm characteristics. We assessed whether management decisions on UIAs changed after implementation of the PHASES score., Patient and Methods: We included all patients with UIAs who were referred to two Dutch tertiary referral centers for aneurysm care in the Netherlands (University Medical Center Utrecht (UMCU) and Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC)) between 2011 and 2017. Analyses were done on an aneurysm level. We calculated the overall proportion of UIAs with a decision to treat before and after PHASES implementation and studied the influence of age and center on post-implementation management changes., Results: We included 623 patients with 803 UIAs. The proportion of UIAs with a decision to treat was 123/360 (34.2%) before and 117/443 (26.4%) after PHASES implementation (absolute risk difference: -7.8%; 95% CI: -14.1 to -1.4). The decision to treat was made at a higher median PHASES score after implementation (7 points (IQR 5;10) pre- versus 8 points (IQR 5;10) post-implementation; p = 0.14). The reduced proportion with a treatment decision after implementation was most pronounced in patients <50 years (-22.3%; 95% CI: -39.2 to -3.4) and was restricted to treatment decisions made at the UMCU (-10.6%; 95% CI: -18.5 to -2.5)., Discussion and Conclusions: Management of UIAs changed following implementation of the PHASES score, but the impact of PHASES implementation on treatment decisions differed across age subgroups and centers., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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42. Surgical Decompression for Space-Occupying Hemispheric Infarction: A Systematic Review and Individual Patient Meta-analysis of Randomized Clinical Trials.
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Reinink H, Jüttler E, Hacke W, Hofmeijer J, Vicaut E, Vahedi K, Slezins J, Su Y, Fan L, Kumral E, Greving JP, Algra A, Kappelle LJ, van der Worp HB, and Neugebauer H
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- Cerebral Infarction mortality, Humans, Survival Rate trends, Cerebral Infarction diagnosis, Cerebral Infarction surgery, Decompression, Surgical methods, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic methods
- Abstract
Importance: In patients with space-occupying hemispheric infarction, surgical decompression reduces the risk of death and increases the chance of a favorable outcome. Uncertainties, however, still remain about the benefit of this treatment for specific patient groups., Objective: To assess whether surgical decompression for space-occupying hemispheric infarction is associated with a reduced risk of death and an increased chance of favorable outcomes, as well as whether this association is modified by patient characteristics., Data Sources: MEDLINE, Embase, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and the Stroke Trials Registry were searched from database inception to October 9, 2019, for English-language articles that reported on the results of randomized clinical trials of surgical decompression vs conservative treatment in patients with space-occupying hemispheric infarction., Study Selection: Published and unpublished randomized clinical trials comparing surgical decompression with medical treatment alone were selected., Data Extraction and Synthesis: Patient-level data were extracted from the trial databases according to a predefined protocol and statistical analysis plan. The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses (PRISMA) reporting guideline and the Cochrane Collaboration's tool for assessing risk of bias were used. One-stage, mixed-effect logistic regression modeling was used for all analyses., Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcome was a favorable outcome (modified Rankin Scale [mRS] score ≤3) at 1 year after stroke. Secondary outcomes included death, reasonable (mRS score ≤4) and excellent (mRS score ≤2) outcomes at 6 months and 1 year, and an ordinal shift analysis across all levels of the mRS. Variables for subgroup analyses were age, sex, presence of aphasia, stroke severity, time to randomization, and involved vascular territories., Results: Data from 488 patients from 7 trials from 6 countries were available for analysis. The risk of bias was considered low to moderate for 6 studies. Surgical decompression was associated with a decreased chance of death (adjusted odds ratio, 0.16; 95% CI, 0.10-0.24) and increased chance of a favorable outcome (adjusted odds ratio, 2.95; 95% CI, 1.55-5.60), without evidence of heterogeneity of treatment effect across any of the prespecified subgroups. Too few patients were treated later than 48 hours after stroke onset to allow reliable conclusions in this subgroup, and the reported proportions of elderly patients reaching a favorable outcome differed considerably among studies., Conclusions and Relevance: The results suggest that the benefit of surgical decompression for space-occupying hemispheric infarction is consistent across a wide range of patients. The benefit of surgery after day 2 and in elderly patients remains uncertain.
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- 2021
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43. Sex and Cardiovascular Function in Relation to Vascular Brain Injury in Patients with Cognitive Complaints.
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Kuipers S, Biessels GJ, Greving JP, Amier RP, de Bresser J, Bron EE, van der Flier WM, van der Geest RJ, Hooghiemstra AM, van Oostenbrugge RJ, van Osch MJP, Kappelle LJ, and Exalto LG
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- Aged, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Sex Factors, Stroke, Lacunar physiopathology, Cerebrovascular Trauma physiopathology, Cognitive Dysfunction physiopathology, Hypertension physiopathology, White Matter pathology
- Abstract
Background: Emerging evidence shows sex differences in manifestations of vascular brain injury in memory clinic patients. We hypothesize that this is explained by sex differences in cardiovascular function., Objective: To assess the relation between sex and manifestations of vascular brain injury in patients with cognitive complaints, in interaction with cardiovascular function., Methods: 160 outpatient clinic patients (68.8±8.5 years, 38% female) with cognitive complaints and vascular brain injury from the Heart-Brain Connection study underwent a standardized work-up, including heart-brain MRI. We calculated sex differences in vascular brain injury (lacunar infarcts, non-lacunar infarcts, white matter hyperintensities [WMHs], and microbleeds) and cardiovascular function (arterial stiffness, cardiac index, left ventricular [LV] mass index, LV mass-to-volume ratio and cerebral blood flow). In separate regression models, we analyzed the interaction effect between sex and cardiovascular function markers on manifestations of vascular brain injury with interaction terms (sex*cardiovascular function marker)., Results: Males had more infarcts, whereas females tended to have larger WMH-volumes. Males had higher LV mass indexes and LV mass-to-volume ratios and lower CBF values compared to females. Yet, we found no interaction effect between sex and individual cardiovascular function markers in relation to the different manifestations of vascular brain injury (p-values interaction terms > 0.05)., Conclusion: Manifestations of vascular brain injury in patients with cognitive complaints differed by sex. There was no interaction between sex and cardiovascular function, warranting further studies to explain the observed sex differences in injury patterns.
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- 2021
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44. Hypertensive Exposure Markers by MRI in Relation to Cerebral Small Vessel Disease and Cognitive Impairment.
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Amier RP, Marcks N, Hooghiemstra AM, Nijveldt R, van Buchem MA, de Roos A, Biessels GJ, Kappelle LJ, van Oostenbrugge RJ, van der Geest RJ, Bots ML, Greving JP, Niessen WJ, van Osch MJP, de Bresser J, van de Ven PM, van der Flier WM, Brunner-La Rocca HP, and van Rossum AC
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- Aged, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Middle Aged, Predictive Value of Tests, Pulse Wave Analysis, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases, Cognitive Dysfunction, Hypertension, Vascular Stiffness
- Abstract
Objectives: This study sought to investigate the extent of hypertensive exposure as assessed by cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in relation to cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD) and cognitive impairment, with the aim of understanding the role of hypertension in the early stages of deteriorating brain health., Background: Preserving brain health into advanced age is one of the great challenges of modern medicine. Hypertension is thought to induce vascular brain injury through exposure of the cerebral microcirculation to increased pressure/pulsatility. Cardiovascular MRI provides markers of (subclinical) hypertensive exposure, such as aortic stiffness by pulse wave velocity (PWV), left ventricular (LV) mass index (LVMi), and concentricity by mass-to-volume ratio., Methods: A total of 559 participants from the Heart-Brain Connection Study (431 patients with manifest cardiovascular disease and 128 control participants), age 67.8 ± 8.8 years, underwent 3.0-T heart-brain MRI and extensive neuropsychological testing. Aortic PWV, LVMi, and LV mass-to-volume ratio were evaluated in relation to presence of CSVD and cognitive impairment. Effect modification by patient group was investigated by interaction terms; results are reported pooled or stratified accordingly., Results: Aortic PWV (odds ratio [OR]: 1.17; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.05 to 1.30 in patient groups only), LVMi (in carotid occlusive disease, OR: 5.69; 95% CI: 1.63 to 19.87; in other groups, OR: 1.30; 95% CI: 1.05 to 1.62]) and LV mass-to-volume ratio (OR: 1.81; 95% CI: 1.46 to 2.24) were associated with CSVD. Aortic PWV (OR: 1.07; 95% CI: 1.02 to 1.13) and LV mass-to-volume ratio (OR: 1.27; 95% CI: 1.07 to 1.51) were also associated with cognitive impairment. Relations were independent of sociodemographic and cardiac index and mostly persisted after correction for systolic blood pressure or medical history of hypertension. Causal mediation analysis showed significant mediation by presence of CSVD in the relation between hypertensive exposure markers and cognitive impairment., Conclusions: The extent of hypertensive exposure is associated with CSVD and cognitive impairment beyond clinical blood pressure or medical history. The mediating role of CSVD suggests that hypertension may lead to cognitive impairment through the occurrence of CSVD., Competing Interests: Author Disclosures The Heart-Brain Connection Study group was supported by the Netherlands Cardiovascular Research Initiative: the Dutch Heart Foundation (CVON 2012-06 Heart-Brain Connection), Dutch Federation of University Medical Centers, the Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development, and the Royal Netherlands Academy of Sciences. None of the authors have direct or indirect relationships with the Netherlands CardioVascular Research Initiative. The authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2021
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45. Absence of Consistent Sex Differences in Outcomes From Symptomatic Carotid Endarterectomy and Stenting Randomized Trials.
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Howard VJ, Algra A, Howard G, Bonati LH, de Borst GJ, Bulbulia R, Calvet D, Eckstein HH, Fraedrich G, Greving JP, Halliday A, Hendrikse J, Jansen O, Brown MM, Mas JL, Ringleb PA, and Brott TG
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Angioplasty instrumentation, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Stents, Angioplasty methods, Carotid Stenosis surgery, Endarterectomy, Carotid methods, Sex Characteristics, Treatment Outcome
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: CREST (Carotid Revascularization Endarterectomy Versus Stenting Trial) reported a higher periprocedural risk for any stroke, death, or myocardial infarction for women randomized to carotid artery stenting (CAS) compared with women randomized to carotid endarterectomy (CEA). No difference in risk by treatment was detected for women relative to men in the 4-year primary outcome. We aimed to conduct a pooled analysis among symptomatic patients in large randomized trials to provide more precise estimates of sex differences in the CAS-to-CEA risk for any stroke or death during the 120-day periprocedural period and ipsilateral stroke thereafter., Methods: Data from the Carotid Stenosis Trialists' Collaboration included outcomes from symptomatic patients in EVA-3S (Endarterectomy Versus Angioplasty in Patients With Symptomatic Severe Carotid Stenosis), SPACE (Stent-Protected Angioplasty Versus Carotid Endarterectomy in Symptomatic Patients), ICSS (International Carotid Stenting Study), and CREST. The primary outcome was any stroke or death within 120 days after randomization and ipsilateral stroke thereafter. Event rates and relative risks were estimated using Poisson regression; effect modification by sex was assessed with a sex-by-treatment-by-trial interaction term, with significant interaction defined a priori as P ≤0.10., Results: Over a median 2.7 years of follow-up, 433 outcomes occurred in 3317 men and 1437 women. The CAS-to-CEA relative risk of the primary outcome was significantly lower for women compared with men in 1 trial, nominally lower in another, and nominally higher in the other two. The sex-by-treatment-by-trial interaction term was significant ( P =0.065), indicating heterogeneity among trials. Contributors to this heterogeneity are primarily differences in periprocedural period. When the trials are nevertheless pooled, there were no significant sex differences in risk in any follow-up period., Conclusions: There were significant differences between trials in the magnitude of sex differences in treatment effect (CAS-to-CEA relative risk), indicating pooling data from these trials to estimate sex differences might not be valid. Whether sex is acting as an effect modifier of the CAS-to-CEA treatment effect in symptomatic patients remains uncertain. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT00190398 (EVA-3S) and NCT00004732 (CREST). URL: https://www.isrctn.com; Unique identifier: ISRCTN57874028 (SPACE) and ISRCTN25337470 (ICSS).
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- 2021
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46. Refining prediction of major bleeding on antiplatelet treatment after transient ischaemic attack or ischaemic stroke.
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Hilkens NA, Li L, Rothwell PM, Algra A, and Greving JP
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Introduction: Bleeding is the main safety concern of treatment with antiplatelet drugs. We aimed to refine prediction of major bleeding on antiplatelet treatment after a transient ischaemic attack (TIA) or stroke by assessing the added value of new predictors to the existing S
2 TOP-BLEED score., Patients and Methods: We used Cox regression analysis to study the association between candidate predictors and major bleeding among 2072 patients with a transient ischaemic attack or ischaemic stroke included in a population-based study (Oxford Vascular Study - OXVASC). An updated model was proposed and validated in 1094 patients with a myocardial infarction included in OXVASC. Models were compared with c-statistics, calibration plots, and net reclassification improvement., Results: Independent predictors for major bleeding on top of S2 TOP-BLEED variables were peptic ulcer (hazard ratio (HR): 1.72; 1.04-2.86), cancer (HR: 2.40; 1.57-3.68), anaemia (HR: 1.55; 0.99-2.44) and renal failure (HR: 2.20; 1.57-4.28). Addition of those variables improved discrimination from 0.69 (0.64-0.73) to 0.73 (0.69-0.78) in the TIA/stroke cohort (p = 0.01). Performance improved particularly for upper gastro-intestinal bleeds (0.70; 0.64-0.75 to 0.77; 0.72-0.82). Net reclassification improved over the entire range of the score (net reclassification improvement: 0.56; 0.36-0.76). In the validation cohort, discriminatory performance improved from 0.68 (0.62-0.74) to 0.70 (0.64-0.76)., Discussion and Conclusion: Peptic ulcer, cancer, anaemia and renal failure improve predictive performance of the S2 TOP-BLEED score for major bleeding after stroke. Future external validation studies will be required to confirm the value of the STOP-BLEED+ score in transient ischaemic attack/stroke patients., (© European Stroke Organisation 2020.)- Published
- 2020
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47. Cerebral blood flow and cognitive functioning in patients with disorders along the heart-brain axis: Cerebral blood flow and the heart-brain axis.
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Leeuwis AE, Hooghiemstra AM, Bron EE, Kuipers S, Oudeman EA, Kalay T, Brunner-La Rocca HP, Kappelle LJ, van Oostenbrugge RJ, Greving JP, Niessen WJ, van Buchem MA, van Osch MJP, van Rossum AC, Prins ND, Biessels GJ, Barkhof F, and van der Flier WM
- Abstract
Introduction: We examined the role of hemodynamic dysfunction in cognition by relating cerebral blood flow (CBF), measured with arterial spin labeling (ASL), to cognitive functioning, in patients with heart failure (HF), carotid occlusive disease (COD), and patients with cognitive complaints and vascular brain injury on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI; ie, possible vascular cognitive impairment [VCI])., Methods: We included 439 participants (124 HF; 75 COD; 127 possible VCI; 113 reference participants) from the Dutch multi-center Heart-Brain Study. We used pseudo-continuous ASL to estimate whole-brain and regional partial volume-corrected CBF. Neuropsychological tests covered global cognition and four cognitive domains., Results: CBF values were lowest in COD, followed by VCI and HF, compared to reference participants. This did not explain cognitive impairment, as we did not find an association between CBF and cognitive functioning., Discussion: We found that reduced CBF is not the major explanatory factor underlying cognitive impairment in patients with hemodynamic dysfunction along the heart-brain axis., Competing Interests: A.E. Leeuwis, A.M. Hooghiemstra, S. Kuipers, E.A. Oudeman, T. Kalay, H.P. Brunner La Rocca, R.J. van Oostenbrugge, W.J. Niessen, M.A. van Buchem, A.C. van Rossum: report no conflicts.E.E. Bron and J.P. Greving have been funded by the Dutch Heart Foundation.N.D. Prins serves on the advisory board of Boehringer Ingelheim and Probiodrug, and on the DSMB of Abbvie's M15‐566 trial. He has provided consultancy services for Sanofi, Takeda, and Kyowa Kirin Pharmaceutical Development. He also receives research support from Alzheimer Nederland (project number WE.03‐2012‐02) and is CEO and co‐owner of Brain Research Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.M.J.P. van Osch has received research funding from Philips, the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), and European Union Horizon 2020 and serves on the editorial boards of JCBFM and NMR in Biomedicine.G.J. Biessels has been funded by the Dutch Heart Foundation (grant 2010T073), ZonMW (Vici grant 918.16.616), The Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development and European Union Horizon 2020 (grant agreement no. 666881, SVDs@target).F. Barkhof is supported by the NIHR biomedical research centre at UCLHF. Barkhof serves as a consultant for Biogen‐Idec, Janssen Alzheimer Immunotherapy, Bayer‐Schering, Merck‐Serono, Roche, Novartis, Genzyme, and Sanofi‐aventis.F. Barkhof has received sponsoring from EU‐H2020, NWO, SMSR, TEVA, Novartis, Toshiba, and Imi and serves on the editorial boards of Radiology, Brain, Neuroradiology, MSJ, and Neurology.Research programs of W.M. van der Flier have been funded by ZonMW, NWO, EU‐FP7, Alzheimer Nederland, Cardiovasculair Onderzoek Nederland, stichting Dioraphte, Gieskes‐Strijbis fonds, Pasman Stichting, Boehringer Ingelheim, Piramal Imaging, Roche BV, Janssen Stellar, Biogen, and Combinostics. All funding is paid to her institution., (© 2020 The Authors. Alzheimer's & Dementia: Translational Research & Clinical Interventions published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Alzheimer's Association.)
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- 2020
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48. Timing of procedural stroke and death in asymptomatic patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy: individual patient analysis from four RCTs.
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Poorthuis MHF, Bulbulia R, Morris DR, Pan H, Rothwell PM, Algra A, Becquemin JP, Bonati LH, Brott TG, Brown MM, Calvet D, Eckstein HH, Fraedrich G, Gregson J, Greving JP, Hendrikse J, Howard G, Jansen O, Mas JL, Lewis SC, de Borst GJ, and Halliday A
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Asymptomatic Diseases, Carotid Stenosis complications, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Stroke epidemiology, Stroke prevention & control, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Carotid Stenosis surgery, Endarterectomy, Carotid adverse effects, Endarterectomy, Carotid mortality, Postoperative Complications diagnosis, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Stroke etiology
- Abstract
Background: The effectiveness of carotid endarterectomy (CEA) for stroke prevention depends on low procedural risks. The aim of this study was to assess the frequency and timing of procedural complications after CEA, which may clarify underlying mechanisms and help inform safe discharge policies., Methods: Individual-patient data were obtained from four large carotid intervention trials (VACS, ACAS, ACST-1 and GALA; 1983-2007). Patients undergoing CEA for asymptomatic carotid artery stenosis directly after randomization were used for the present analysis. Timing of procedural death and stroke was divided into intraoperative day 0, postoperative day 0, days 1-3 and days 4-30., Results: Some 3694 patients were included in the analysis. A total of 103 patients (2·8 per cent) had serious procedural complications (18 fatal strokes, 68 non-fatal strokes, 11 fatal myocardial infarctions and 6 deaths from other causes) [Correction added on 20 April, after first online publication: the percentage value has been corrected to 2·8]. Of the 86 strokes, 67 (78 per cent) were ipsilateral, 17 (20 per cent) were contralateral and two (2 per cent) were vertebrobasilar. Forty-five strokes (52 per cent) were ischaemic, nine (10 per cent) haemorrhagic, and stroke subtype was not determined in 32 patients (37 per cent). Half of the strokes happened on the day of CEA. Of all serious complications recorded, 44 (42·7 per cent) occurred on day 0 (20 intraoperative, 17 postoperative, 7 with unclear timing), 23 (22·3 per cent) on days 1-3 and 36 (35·0 per cent) on days 4-30., Conclusion: At least half of the procedural strokes in this study were ischaemic and ipsilateral to the treated artery. Half of all procedural complications occurred on the day of surgery, but one-third after day 3 when many patients had been discharged., (© 2020 BJS Society Ltd Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2020
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49. Would treatment decisions about secondary prevention of CVD based on estimated lifetime benefit rather than 10-year risk reduction be cost-effective?
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Berkelmans GFN, Greving JP, van der Graaf Y, Visseren FLJ, and Dorresteijn JAN
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Objective: To test the hypothesis that treatment decisions (treatment with a PCSK9-mAb versus no treatment) are both more effective and more cost-effective when based on estimated lifetime benefit than when based on estimated risk reduction over 10 years., Methods: A microsimulation model was constructed for 10,000 patients with stable cardiovascular disease (CVD). Costs and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) due to recurrent cardiovascular events and (non)vascular death were estimated for lifetime benefit-based compared to 10-year risk-based treatment, with PCSK9 inhibition as an illustration example. Lifetime benefit in months gained and 10-year absolute risk reduction were estimated using the SMART-REACH model, including an individualized treatment effect of PCSK9 inhibitors based on baseline low-density lipoprotein cholesterol. For the different numbers of patients treated (i.e. the 5%, 10%, and 20% of patients with the highest estimated benefit of both strategies), cost-effectiveness was assessed using the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER), indicating additional costs per QALY gain., Results: Lifetime benefit-based treatment of 5%, 10%, and 20% of patients with the highest estimated benefit resulted in an ICER of €36,440/QALY, €39,650/QALY, or €41,426/QALY. Ten-year risk-based treatment decisions of 5%, 10%, and 20% of patients with the highest estimated risk reduction resulted in an ICER of €48,187/QALY, €53,368/QALY, or €52,390/QALY., Conclusion: Treatment decisions (treatment with a PCSK9-mAb versus no treatment) are both more effective and more cost-effective when based on estimated lifetime benefit than when based on estimated risk reduction over 10 years., Competing Interests: Competing interestsThe authors declare that they have no competing interest., (© The Author(s) 2020.)
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- 2020
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50. A support programme for secondary prevention in patients with transient ischaemic attack and minor stroke (INSPiRE-TMS): an open-label, randomised controlled trial.
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Ahmadi M, Laumeier I, Ihl T, Steinicke M, Ferse C, Endres M, Grau A, Hastrup S, Poppert H, Palm F, Schoene M, Seifert CL, Kandil FI, Weber JE, von Weitzel-Mudersbach P, Wimmer MLJ, Algra A, Amarenco P, Greving JP, Busse O, Köhler F, Marx P, and Audebert HJ
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- Aged, Counseling methods, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Recurrence, Ischemic Attack, Transient prevention & control, Risk Reduction Behavior, Secondary Prevention methods, Stroke prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: Patients with recent stroke or transient ischaemic attack are at high risk for a further vascular event, possibly leading to permanent disability or death. Although evidence-based treatments for secondary prevention are available, many patients do not achieve recommended behavioural modifications and pharmaceutical prevention targets in the long-term. We aimed to investigate whether a support programme for enhanced secondary prevention can reduce the frequency of recurrent vascular events., Methods: INSPiRE-TMS was an open-label, multicentre, international randomised controlled trial done at seven German hospitals with acute stroke units and a Danish stroke centre. Patients with non-disabling stroke or transient ischaemic attack within 2 weeks from study enrolment and at least one modifiable risk factor (ie, arterial hypertension, diabetes, atrial fibrillation, or smoking) were included. Computerised randomisation was used to allocate patients (1:1) either to the support programme in addition to conventional care or to conventional care alone. The support programme used feedback and motivational interviewing strategies with eight outpatient visits over 2 years aiming to improve adherence to secondary prevention targets. The primary outcome was the composite of major vascular events consisting of stroke, acute coronary syndrome, and vascular death, assessed in the intention-to-treat population (all patients who underwent randomisation, did not withdraw study participation, and had at least one follow-up). Outcomes were assessed at annual follow-ups using time-to-first-event analysis. All-cause death was monitored as a safety outcome. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01586702., Findings: From Aug 22, 2011, to Oct 30, 2017, we enrolled 2098 patients. Of those, 1048 (50·0%) were randomly assigned to the support programme group and 1050 (50·0%) patients were assigned to the conventional care group. 1030 (98·3%) patients in the support group and 1042 (99·2%) patients in the conventional care group were included in the intention-to-treat analysis. The mean age of analysed participants was 67·4 years and 700 (34%) were women. After a mean follow-up of 3·6 years, the primary outcome of major vascular events had occurred in 163 (15·8%) of 1030 patients of the support programme group and in 175 (16·8%) of 1042 patients of the conventional care group (hazard ratio [HR] 0·92, 95% CI 0·75-1·14). Total major vascular event numbers were 209 for the support programme group and 225 for the conventional care group (incidence rate ratio 0·93, 95% CI 0·77-1·12; p=0·46) and all-cause death occurred in 73 (7·1%) patients in the support programme group and 85 (8·2%) patients in the conventional care group (HR 0·85, 0·62-1·17). More patients in the support programme group achieved secondary prevention targets (eg, in 1-year-follow-up 52% vs 42% [p<0·0001] for blood pressure, 62% vs 54% [p=0·0010] for LDL, 33% vs 19% [p<0·0001] for physical activity, and 51% vs 34% [p=0·0010] for smoking cessation)., Interpretation: Provision of an intensified secondary prevention programme in patients with non-disabling stroke or transient ischaemic attack was associated with improved achievement of secondary prevention targets but did not lead to a significantly lower rate of major vascular events. Further research is needed to investigate the effects of support programmes in selected patients who do not achieve secondary prevention targets soon after discharge., Funding: German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, Pfizer, and German Stroke Foundation., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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