Systolic Blood Pressure Control and Mortality After Stroke in Hypertensive Patients
BP Lowering in Acute Stroke Flops for Improving Outcomes
After stroke, compared with Systolic Blood Pressure in the high range, low to normal SBP is associated with poorer mortality outcomes.
Systolic Blood Pressure and Mortality After Stroke
Blood pressure-lowering treatment with candesartan had no beneficial effect on activities of daily living and level of care at 6 months
Early blood pressure lowering treatment in acute stroke. Ordinal analysis of vascular events in the Scandinavian Candesartan Acute Stroke Trial (SCAST)
Jusufovic, Mirza; Sandset, Else Charlotte; Bath, Philip M.; Berge, Eivind; on behalf of the Scandinavian Candesartan Acute Stroke Trial (SCAST) Study Group
Published Ahead-of-Print
Objective: Early blood pressure-lowering treatment
appears to be beneficial in patients with acute intracerebral
haemorrhage and potentially in ischaemic stroke. We used a new method
for analysis of vascular events in the Scandinavian Candesartan Acute
Stroke Trial to see if the effect was dependent on the timing of
treatment.
Methods: Scandinavian Candesartan Acute Stroke Trial was a
randomized controlled and placebo-controlled trial of candesartan
within 30 h of ischaemic or haemorrhagic stroke. Of 2029 patients, 231
(11.4%) had a vascular event (vascular death, nonfatal stroke or
nonfatal myocardial infarction) during the first 6 months. The modified
Rankin Scale (mRS) score following a vascular event was used to
categorize vascular events in order of severity: no event (n = 1798),
minor (mRS 0-2, n = 59), moderately severe (mRS 3-4, n = 57) and major
event (mRS 5-6, n = 115). We used ordinal logistic regression for
analysis and adjusted for predefined prognostic variables.
Results: Candesartan had no overall effect on vascular
events (adjusted common odds ratio 1.11, 95% confidence interval
0.84-1.47, P = 0.48), and the effects were the same in ischaemic and
haemorrhagic stroke. Among the patients treated within 6 h, the adjusted
common odds ratio for vascular events was 0.37, 95% confidence interval
0.16-0.84, P = 0.02, and there was no heterogeneity of effect between
ischaemic and haemorrhagic strokes.
Conclusion: Ordinal analysis of vascular events showed no
overall effect of candesartan in the subacute phase of stroke. The
effect of treatment given within 6 h of stroke onset appears promising,
and will be addressed in ongoing trials. Ordinal analysis of vascular
events is feasible and can be used in future trials.
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