Age-Specific Association of Co-Morbidity With Home-Time After Acute Stroke.

IF 2.9 4区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-03-27 DOI:10.1017/cjn.2024.37
Raed A Joundi, James A King, Jillian Stang, Dana Nicol, Michael D Hill, Amy Y X Yu, Moira K Kapral, Eric E Smith
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Abstract

Objective: To examine the association of co-morbidity with home-time after acute stroke and whether the association is influenced by age.

Methods: We conducted a province-wide study using linked administrative databases to identify all admissions for first acute ischemic stroke or intracerebral hemorrhage between 2007 and 2018 in Alberta, Canada. We used ischemic stroke-weighted Charlson Co-morbidity Index of 3 or more to identify those with severe co-morbidity. We used zero-inflated negative binomial models to determine the association of severe co-morbidity with 90-day and 1-year home-time, and logistic models for achieving ≥ 80 out of 90 days of home-time, assessing for effect modification by age and adjusting for sex, stroke type, comprehensive stroke center care, hypertension, atrial fibrillation, year of study, and separately adjusting for estimated stroke severity. We also evaluated individual co-morbidities.

Results: Among 28,672 patients in our final cohort, severe co-morbidity was present in 27.7% and was associated with lower home-time, with a greater number of days lost at younger age (-13 days at age < 60 compared to -7 days at age 80+ years for 90-day home-time; -69 days at age < 60 compared to -51 days at age 80+ years for 1-year home-time). The reduction in probability of achieving ≥ 80 days of home-time was also greater at younger age (-22.7% at age < 60 years compared to -9.0% at age 80+ years). Results were attenuated but remained significant after adjusting for estimated stroke severity and excluding those who died. Myocardial infarction, diabetes, and cancer/metastases had a greater association with lower home-time at younger age, and those with dementia had the greatest reduction in home time.

Conclusion: Severe co-morbidity in acute stroke is associated with lower home-time, more strongly at younger age.

并发症与急性中风后居家时间的相关性与年龄有关。
目的研究并发症与急性中风后居家时间的关系,以及这种关系是否受年龄的影响:我们使用关联的行政数据库开展了一项全省范围的研究,以确定加拿大艾伯塔省在 2007 年至 2018 年间所有因首次急性缺血性卒中或脑内出血而入院的患者。我们使用缺血性卒中加权 Charlson 共病指数 3 或更高来识别有严重共病的患者。我们使用零膨胀负二项模型来确定严重并发症与 90 天和 1 年居家时间的关系,并使用逻辑模型来确定 90 天居家时间中达到≥ 80 天的情况,评估年龄对效果的影响,并调整性别、卒中类型、综合卒中中心护理、高血压、心房颤动、研究年份,以及单独调整估计的卒中严重程度。我们还评估了个别并发症:在我们的最终队列中的 28,672 名患者中,有 27.7% 的患者合并有严重的并发症,这与较低的居家时间有关,年龄越小损失的居家时间天数越多(就 90 天居家时间而言,年龄小于 60 岁的患者损失了 13 天,而年龄大于 80 岁的患者损失了 7 天;就 1 年居家时间而言,年龄小于 60 岁的患者损失了 69 天,而年龄大于 80 岁的患者损失了 51 天)。年龄越小,实现≥80 天居家时间的概率降低幅度也越大(< 60 岁为 -22.7%,而 80 岁以上为 -9.0%)。在对估计的中风严重程度进行调整并排除死亡患者后,结果有所减弱,但仍具有显著性。心肌梗死、糖尿病和癌症/转移瘤与年轻时居家时间减少的关系更大,而痴呆症患者居家时间减少的幅度最大:结论:急性脑卒中的严重并发症与居家时间减少有关,年龄越小居家时间越短。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
3.30%
发文量
330
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Canadian Neurological Sciences Federation The Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences is the official publication of the four member societies of the Canadian Neurological Sciences Federation -- Canadian Neurological Society (CNS), Canadian Association of Child Neurology (CACN), Canadian Neurosurgical Society (CNSS), Canadian Society of Clinical Neurophysiologists (CSCN). The Journal is a widely circulated internationally recognized medical journal that publishes peer-reviewed articles. The Journal is published in January, March, May, July, September, and November in an online only format. The first Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences (the Journal) was published in 1974 in Winnipeg. In 1981, the Journal became the official publication of the member societies of the CNSF.
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