Relation of Pre‐Stroke Aspirin Use With Cerebral Infarct Volume and Functional Outcomes

Objective We investigated (1) the associations of pre‐stroke aspirin use with thrombus burden, infarct volume, hemorrhagic transformation, early neurological deterioration (END), and functional outcome, and (2) whether stroke subtypes modify these associations in first‐ever ischemic stroke. Methods...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of neurology 2021-11, Vol.90 (5), p.763-776
Hauptverfasser: Ryu, Wi‐Sun, Schellingerhout, Dawid, Hong, Keun‐Sik, Jeong, Sang‐Wuk, Kim, Beom Joon, Kim, Joon‐Tae, Lee, Kyung Bok, Park, Tai Hwan, Park, Sang‐Soon, Park, Jong‐Moo, Kang, Kyusik, Cho, Yong‐Jin, Park, Hong‐Kyun, Lee, Byung‐Chul, Yu, Kyung‐Ho, Oh, Mi Sun, Lee, Soo Joo, Kim, Jae Guk, Cha, Jae‐Kwan, Kim, Dae‐Hyun, Lee, Jun, Han, Moon‐Ku, Park, Man Seok, Choi, Kang‐Ho, Nahrendorf, Matthias, Lee, Juneyoung, Bae, Hee‐Joon, Kim, Dong‐Eog
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective We investigated (1) the associations of pre‐stroke aspirin use with thrombus burden, infarct volume, hemorrhagic transformation, early neurological deterioration (END), and functional outcome, and (2) whether stroke subtypes modify these associations in first‐ever ischemic stroke. Methods This multicenter magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)‐based study included 5,700 consecutive patients with acute first‐ever ischemic stroke, who did not undergo intravenous thrombolysis or endovascular thrombectomy, from May 2011 through February 2014. Propensity score‐based augmented inverse probability weighting was performed to estimate adjusted effects of pre‐stroke aspirin use. Results The mean age was 67 years (41% women), and 15.9% (n = 907) were taking aspirin before stroke. Pre‐stroke aspirin use (vs nonuse) was significantly related to a reduced infarct volume (by 30%), particularly in large artery atherosclerosis stroke (by 45%). In cardioembolic stroke, pre‐stroke aspirin use was associated with a ~50% lower incidence of END (adjusted difference = −5.4%, 95% confidence interval [CI] = −8.9 to −1.9). Thus, pre‐stroke aspirin use was associated with ~30% higher likelihood of favorable outcome (3‐month modified Rankin Scale score 
ISSN:0364-5134
1531-8249
DOI:10.1002/ana.26219