After an initial ischemic stroke or TIA, the 2-year risk of a recurrent stroke (11.8%) was higher than the risk of a subsequent cardiac event (7.7%).
Cohort (n=1,923)
Following an initial ischemic stroke or TIA, patients are at a higher risk of experiencing a recurrent stroke than a cardiac event within 2 years, which should inform preventive therapy planning.
Absolute Event Rate: 11.8% vs 7.7%
Background and Purpose— Patients with ischemic stroke and transient ischemic attack (TIA) are at risk for recurrent cerebrovascular and cardiac events. Understanding which of these adverse events is more likely to occur next is instructive for preventive therapy planning. Methods— Subjects (n=1923) were identified from a sample of hospital discharges from administrative claims for the Michigan Medicare population from January 2001 to June 2001 using International Classification of Diseases , 9th Revision codes for ischemic stroke/TIA. Outcomes (cardiac events, myocardial infarction MI, percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty PTCA, coronary artery bypass grafting CABG and ischemic strokes) were identified for 2001 to 2003. Comparison between cardiac and stroke as secondary events were made using cumulative incidence estimates. Results— Over the follow-up period, 172 patients had a cardiac event (62.8% MI, 7.6% CABG, 14.5% PTCA, 9.3% MI and PTCA, and 5.8% MI and CABG) and 239 had a stroke as their first event. Cardiac event at 2 years had occurred in 7.7%, and stroke occurred in 11.8%. Conclusion— The risk of stroke after initial stroke/TIA is higher than the risk of cardiac events. The propensity after stroke/TIA to have the first recurrent ischemic event in the brain, rather than in the heart, has implications for prophylactic therapy selection.
Brown et al. (Sat,) conducted a cohort in Ischemic stroke and transient ischemic attack (TIA) (n=1,923). Initial ischemic stroke or TIA was evaluated on Recurrent stroke vs cardiac event. After an initial ischemic stroke or TIA, the 2-year risk of a recurrent stroke (11.8%) was higher than the risk of a subsequent cardiac event (7.7%).
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