Post-ACS stroke risk exceeded expected rates up to 2 years (SIR 1.40; 95% CI 1.03-1.87; p=0.028) but progressively reversed to below the population norm at 10-15 years (SIR 0.50; p<0.001).
Cohort (n=2,424)
Does intensive risk factor management after acute coronary syndrome alter the long-term risk of incident stroke compared to the general population?
2,424 90-day post-acute coronary syndrome (ACS) survivors from a UK population-based study of all vascular events (2002-2022)
Intensive risk factor management post-ACS
Age/sex-specific expected stroke rates from contemporaneous underlying population
Incident strokes from 90 days post-ACS up to 15 yearshard clinical
Post-ACS stroke risk is initially elevated but falls below the population norm after 5 years, suggesting that long-term intensive secondary prevention for ACS effectively acts as primary prevention for stroke.
Effect estimate: SIR 1.40 (95% CI 1.03-1.87)
p-value: p=0.028
Abstract Background and aims The impact of multi-intervention primary prevention of stroke has proved difficult to assess even in people with vascular risk factors due to poor treatment-adherence on long-term trial follow-up. However, a measure of potential could be estimated from the time-course of stroke incidence on intensive risk factor management after acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Long-term stroke risk should be high due to shared vascular risk factors, but intensive prevention could gradually reduce risk. In the absence of previous studies, we compared the time-course of long-term stroke risk after ACS with age/sex-specific expected rates. Methods In a UK population-based study of all vascular events (2002–2022), post-90-day incident strokes after an incident ACS were identified to 15-years by face-to-face follow-up and multiple other sources. Follow-up period-specific observed vs expected stroke rates (age/sex-adjusted Poisson standardised incidence ratios -SIRs) were derived using contemporaneous underlying population stroke incidence. Results During 23,396 years of follow-up of 2,424 90-day post-ACS survivors there were 167 incident strokes. The incidence exceeded expected up to 2-years (SIR=1.40, 95%CI=1.03-1.87, p=0.028), but progressively reversed (pint0.001) at 2-5-years (0.86,0.62-1.16, p=0.39), 5-10 years (0.68,0.51-0.89, p=0.005) and 10-15 years (0.50,0.33-0.72, p0.001). Results were similar after accounting for competing risks of cardiac and other causes of death. Conclusions Post-ACS stroke risk is increased until 2-years, but subsequently reverses to below the population norm, even without adjustment for risk factor burden. Long-term primary prevention of incident stroke could be highly effective in other settings if similarly intensive management could be achieved. Conflict of interest Li zhang. nothing to disclose
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Li Zhang
Oxford BioMedica (United Kingdom)
Sally Beebe
Oxford BioMedica (United Kingdom)
Lauren Quinn
Oxford BioMedica (United Kingdom)
European Stroke Journal
Oxford BioMedica (United Kingdom)
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Zhang et al. (Fri,) conducted a cohort in Acute Coronary Syndrome (n=2,424). Intensive risk factor management post-ACS vs. Age/sex-specific expected population rates was evaluated on Incident strokes (SIR 1.40, 95% CI 1.03-1.87, p=0.028). Post-ACS stroke risk exceeded expected rates up to 2 years (SIR 1.40; 95% CI 1.03-1.87; p=0.028) but progressively reversed to below the population norm at 10-15 years (SIR 0.50; p<0.001).
synapsesocial.com/papers/69fd7e79bfa21ec5bbf06ac8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/esj/aakag023.549
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