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White Matter Hyperintensity Volume and Poststroke Cognition: An Individual Patient Data Pooled Analysis of 9 Ischemic Stroke Cohort Studies.

Authors :
de Kort FAS
Coenen M
Weaver NA
Kuijf HJ
Aben HP
Bae HJ
Bordet R
Cammà G
Chen CPLH
Dewenter A
Duering M
Fang R
van der Giessen RS
Hamilton OKL
Hilal S
Huenges Wajer IMC
Kan CN
Kim J
Kim BJ
Köhler S
de Kort PLM
Koudstaal PJ
Lim JS
Lopes R
Mok VCT
Staals J
Venketasubramanian N
Verhagen CM
Verhey FRJ
Wardlaw JM
Xu X
Yu KH
Biesbroek JM
Biessels GJ
Source :
Stroke [Stroke] 2023 Dec; Vol. 54 (12), pp. 3021-3029. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Oct 30.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: White matter hyperintensities (WMH) are associated with cognitive dysfunction after ischemic stroke. Yet, uncertainty remains about affected domains, the role of other preexisting brain injury, and infarct types in the relation between WMH burden and poststroke cognition. We aimed to disentangle these factors in a large sample of patients with ischemic stroke from different cohorts.<br />Methods: We pooled and harmonized individual patient data (n=1568) from 9 cohorts, through the Meta VCI Map consortium (www.metavcimap.org). Included cohorts comprised patients with available magnetic resonance imaging and multidomain cognitive assessment <15 months poststroke. In this individual patient data meta-analysis, linear mixed models were used to determine the association between WMH volume and domain-specific cognitive functioning ( Z scores; attention and executive functioning, processing speed, language and verbal memory) for the total sample and stratified by infarct type. Preexisting brain injury was accounted for in the multivariable models and all analyses were corrected for the study site as a random effect.<br />Results: In the total sample (67 years [SD, 11.5], 40% female), we found a dose-dependent inverse relationship between WMH volume and poststroke cognitive functioning across all 4 cognitive domains (coefficients ranging from -0.09 [SE, 0.04, P =0.01] for verbal memory to -0.19 [SE, 0.03, P <0.001] for attention and executive functioning). This relation was independent of acute infarct volume and the presence of lacunes and old infarcts. In stratified analyses, the relation between WMH volume and domain-specific functioning was also largely independent of infarct type.<br />Conclusions: In patients with ischemic stroke, increasing WMH volume is independently associated with worse cognitive functioning across all major domains, regardless of old ischemic lesions and infarct type.<br />Competing Interests: Disclosures Dr H.-J. Bae reports grants from Chong Gun Dang Pharmaceutical Corp and Korean Drug Co, Ltd outside of the submitted work. Dr G.J. Biessels reports grants from The Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development (ZonMW), during the conduct of the study. The other authors report no conflicts.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1524-4628
Volume :
54
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Stroke
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37901947
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.123.044297