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Mortality and recurrent vascular events after first incident stroke: a 9-year community-based study of 0·5 million Chinese adults

Authors :
Yiping Chen, DPhil
Neil Wright, PhD
Yu Guo, MSc
Iain Turnbull, MRCP
Christiana Kartsonaki, DPhil
Ling Yang, PhD
Zheng Bian, MSc
Pei Pei, BSc
Dongxia Pan, MBBS
Yidan Zhang, BSc
Haiqiang Qin, MD
Yilong Wang, ProfMD
Jun Lv, ProfPhD
Ming Liu, MD
Zilong Hao, MD
Yongjun Wang, ProfMD
Canqing Yu, PhD
Richard Peto, ProfFRS
Rory Collins, ProfFRS
Liming Li, ProfMPH
Robert Clarke, ProfFRCP
Zhengming Chen, ProfDPhil
Yiping Chen
Neil Wright
Yu Guo
Iain Turnbull
Christiana Kartsonaki
Ling Yang
Zheng Bian
Pei Pei
Dongxia Pan
Yidan Zhang
Haiqiang Qin
Yilong Wang
Jun Lv
Ming Liu
Zilong Hao
Yongjun Wang
Canqing Yu
Richard Peto
Rory Collins
Liming Li
Robert Clarke
Zhengming Chen
Junshi Chen
Robin Walters
Daniel Avery
Derrick Bennett
Ruth Boxall
Fiona Bragg
Yumei Chang
Huaidong Du
Simon Gilbert
Alex Hacker
Michael Holmes
Rene Kerosi
Garry Lancaster
Kuang Lin
John McDonnell
Iona Millwood
Qunhua Nie
Paul Ryder
Sam Sansome
Dan Schmidt
Rajani Sohoni
Jenny Wang
Lin Wang
Xiaoming Yang
Xiao Han
Can Hou
Biao Jing
Chao Liu
Zengchang Pang
Ruqin Gao
Shanpeng Li
Shaojie Wang
Yongmei Liu
Ranran Du
Yajing Zang
Liang Cheng
Xiaocao Tian
Hua Zhang
Yaoming Zhai
Feng Ning
Xiaohui Sun
Feifei Li
Silu Lv
Junzheng Wang
Wei Hou
Mingyuan Zeng
Ge Jiang
Xue Zhou
Liqiu Yang
Hui He
Bo Yu
Yanjie Li
Qinai Xu
Quan Kang
Ziyan Guo
Dan Wang
Ximin Hu
Hongmei Wang
Jinyan Chen
Yan Fu
Zhenwang Fu
Xiaohuan Wang
Min Weng
Zhendong Guo
Shukuan Wu
Yilei Li
Huimei Li
Zhifang Fu
Ming Wu
Yonglin Zhou
Jinyi Zhou
Ran Tao
Jie Yang
Jian Su
Fang Liu
Jun Zhang
Yihe Hu
Yan Lu
Liangcai Ma
Aiyu Tang
Shuo Zhang
Jianrong Jin
Jingchao Liu
Zhenzhu Tang
Naying Chen
Ying Huang
Mingqiang Li
Jinhuai Meng
Rong Pan
Qilian Jiang
Jian Lan
Yun Liu
Liuping Wei
Ningyu Chen
Ping Wang
Fanwen Meng
Yulu Qin
Sisi Wang
Xianping Wu
Ningmei Zhang
Xiaofang Chen
Weiwei Zhou
Guojin Luo
Jianguo Li
Xunfu Zhong
Jiaqiu Liu
Qiang Sun
Pengfei Ge
Xiaolan Ren
Caixia Dong
Hui Zhang
Enke Mao
Xiaoping Wang
Tao Wang
Xi Zhang
Ding Zhang
Gang Zhou
Shixian Feng
Liang Chang
Lei Fan
Yulian Gao
Tianyou He
Huarong Sun
Pan He
Chen Hu
Xukui Zhang
Huifang Wu
Min Yu
Ruying Hu
Hao Wang
Yijian Qian
Chunmei Wang
Kaixu Xie
Lingli Chen
Zhongxi Fu
Qiaohua Xu
Xin Xu
Hao Zhang
Huajun Long
Xianzhi Li
Libo Zhang
Zhe Qiu
Source :
The Lancet Global Health, Vol 8, Iss 4, Pp e580-e590 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2020.

Abstract

Summary: Background: Stroke is a leading cause of death and disability worldwide. Despite considerable improvements in diagnosis and treatment, little is known about the short-term and long-term prognosis after a first stroke in low-income and middle-income countries, including China. We aimed to assess the short-term and long-term risk of recurrent stroke and mortality after a first stroke for each of the major pathological stroke types. Methods: This population-based cohort study included adults aged 35–74 years without disability who were recruited to the China Kadoorie Biobank (CKB). A baseline survey was conducted in ten geographical areas (five urban, five rural) in China, and participants had clinical measurements recorded. Participants were followed up by monitoring death registries and by electronic linkage to health registries and health insurance claims databases, with follow-up until Jan 1, 2017. Participants were excluded from analyses if they had a previous history of stroke, transient ischaemic attack, or ischaemic heart disease at baseline. All incidences of fatal and non-fatal stroke during the study period were recorded by type (ischaemic stroke, intracerebral haemorrhage, subarachnoid haemorrhage, and unspecified type). Primary outcome measures were 28-day mortality, recurrent stroke, major vascular events (recurrent stroke, myocardial infarction, or vascular death), vascular mortality, and all-cause mortality. Findings: Of 512 715 individuals in the CKB, 489 586 participants without previous ischaemic heart disease and stroke at recruitment were included, of whom 45 732 (42 073 [92%] confirmed by brain imaging) had a stroke during the study period. The mean age was 59·3 years (SD 9·8) for participants who had a stroke (54% women) and 50·8 years (10·3) for participants with no stroke (60% women). 36 588 (80%) of the incident cases of stroke were ischaemic stroke, 7440 (16%) were intracerebral haemorrhage, 702 (2%) were subarachnoid haemorrhage, and 1002 (2%) were an unspecified stroke type. 28-day mortality was 3% (95% CI 3–4) for ischaemic stroke, 47% (46–48)for intracerebral haemorrhage, 19% (17–22; 52% for rural areas and 32% for urban areas) subarachnoid haemorrhage, and 24% (22–27) for unspecified stroke. Among participants who survived stroke at 28 days, 41% (41–42) had recurrent stroke at 5 years (ischaemic stroke 41% [41–42], intracerebral haemorrhage 44% [42–46], subarachnoid haemorrhage 22% [18–27], unspecified stroke type 40% [35–44]) and mortality at 5 years was 17% ([17–18] ischaemic stroke 16% [15–16], intracerebral haemorrhage 28% [26–29], subarachnoid haemorrhage 16% [12–20], unspecified stroke type 15% [12–19]). After a first ischaemic stroke, 91% of recurrent strokes were also ischaemic stroke; after an intracerebral haemorrhage, 56% of recurrent strokes were intracerebral haemorrhage, and 41% of recurrent strokes were ischaemic stroke. Interpretation: After a first stroke, the risk of recurrence or death within 5 years was high among this population of Chinese adults. Urgent improvements to secondary prevention of stroke in China are needed to reduce these risks. Funding: Wellcome Trust, Medical Research Council, British Heart Foundation, Cancer Research UK, Kadoorie Charitable Foundation, Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology, National Natural Science Foundation of China. Copyright: © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2214109X
Volume :
8
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Lancet Global Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.88446ef485d4f3dbc2342505be0852c
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(20)30069-3