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The Effect of Age on Characteristics and Mortality of Intracerebral Hemorrhage in the Oldest-Old

Authors :
Michele Domenico Spampinato
Maura Coveri
Luigi Simonetti
Marco Zoli
Fabiola Maioli
Paola Forti
Valeria Nativio
Giuseppe Di Pasquale
Carlotta Barbara
Gaetano Procaccianti
Forti, Paola
Maioli, Fabiola
Domenico Spampinato, Michele
Barbara, Carlotta
Nativio, Valeria
Coveri, Maura
Zoli, Marco
Simonetti, Luigi
Di Pasquale, Giuseppe
Procaccianti, Gaetano
Source :
Cerebrovascular Diseases. 42:485-492
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
S. Karger AG, 2016.

Abstract

Background: Incidence of acute intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) increases with age, but there is a lack of information about ICH characteristics in the oldest-old (age ≥85 years). In particular, there is a need for information about hematoma volume, which is included in most clinical scales for prediction of mortality in ICH patients. Many of these scales also assume that, independent of ICH characteristics, the oldest-old have a higher mortality than younger elderly patients (age 65-74 years). However, supporting evidence from cohort studies is limited. We investigated ICH characteristics of oldest-old subjects compared to young (Methods: We retrospectively collected clinical and neuroimaging data of 383 subjects (age 34-104 years) with acute supratentorial primary ICH who were admitted to an Italian Stroke Unit (SU) between October 2007 and December 2014. Measured ICH characteristics included hematoma location, volume and intraventricular extension of hemorrhage on admission CT scan; admission Glasgow Coma Scale ≤8 and hematoma expansion (HE) measured on follow-up CT-scans obtained after 24 h. General linear models and logistic models were used to investigate the association of age with ICH characteristics. These models were adjusted for pre-admission characteristics, hematoma location and time from symptom onset to admission CT scan. Limited to elderly subjects, Cox models were used to investigate the association of age with in-SU and 1-year mortality: the model for in-SU mortality adjusted for pre-admission and ICH admission characteristics and the model for 1-year mortality additionally adjusted for functional status and disposition at SU discharge. Results: Independent of pre-admission characteristics, hematoma location and time from symptom onset to admission CT-scan, oldest-old subjects had the highest admission hematoma volume (p < 0.01). Age was unrelated to all other ICH characteristics including HE. In elderly patients, multivariable adjusted risk of in-SU and 1-year mortality did not vary across age categories. Conclusions: Oldest-old subjects with acute supratentorial ICH have higher admission hematoma volume than young and young-old subjects but do not differ for other ICH characteristics. When taking into account confounding from ICH characteristics, risk of in-SU and 1-year mortality in elderly subjects with acute supratentorial ICH does not differ across age categories. Our findings question use of age as an independent criterion for stratification of mortality risk in elderly subjects with acute ICH.

Details

ISSN :
14219786 and 10159770
Volume :
42
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cerebrovascular Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ae6dc9683712dd14d3e9188f6561752d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000448813