You better hope like hell you have a stroke that matches the clinical
trials so your doctors know exactly what to do. Otherwise you get to be
a guinea pig in 'winging it'. I expect 100% recovery for all. No survivor left behind.
Implications for Treatment
and on behalf of the Oxford Vascular Study
Originally published10 Sep 2018Stroke. 2018;0:STROKEAHA.118.022416
Abstract
Background and Purpose—
Patients
with premorbid disability, generally defined as modified Rankin Scale
(mRS) score ≥2, are often excluded from trials of acute stroke
therapies. However, increased disability in such patients will adversely
affect long-term outcomes if treatments are withheld in routine
practice. We assessed the extent to which increased disability
poststroke influences 5-year mortality, institutionalization, and costs
in premorbidly disabled patients.
Methods—
In
a population-based, prospective cohort of patients with ischemic stroke
(OXVASC [Oxford Vascular Study], 2002–2014), we tracked mortality,
institutionalization, and healthcare/social-care costs during follow-up.
We compared 5-year mortality and poststroke institutionalization (Cox
regressions) and 5-year healthcare/social-care costs (generalized linear
model) in 3-month survivors with premorbid mRS of 2 to 4 (excluding
extreme disability, mRS=5), based on the degree of change in mRS(ΔmRS)
from prestroke to 3 months poststroke, adjusting analyses for
age/sex/initial National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale.
Results—
Among
1607 patients, 530 (33.0%) had premorbid mRS of 2 to 4. Only 2
premorbidly disabled patients received thrombolysis, but 421 (79.4%)
were alive at 3 months. ΔmRS was independently associated with 5-year
mortality/institutionalization (adjusted hazard ratio for ΔmRS=1 versus
0: 1.59; 95% CI, 1.20–2.11; ΔmRS=2: 2.39; 95% CI, 1.62–3.53; ΔmRS=3:
4.12; 95% CI, 1.98–8.60; P<0.001) and costs (margin for ΔmRS ≥2 versus 0: $30 011, 95% CI, $4222–55 801; P=0.023).
Results were similar on examining patients with premorbid mRS of 2, 3,
and 4 separately (eg, 5-year mortality/institutionalization adjusted
hazard ratio for premorbid mRS=3 with ΔmRS=1 versus 0: 1.60; 95% CI,
1.06–2.42; P=0.027; ΔmRS=2: 3.20; 95% CI, 1.85–5.54; P<0.001).
Conclusions—
Patients
with stroke with premorbid disability have higher mortality,
institutionalization, and costs if they accumulate additional disability
because of the stroke. These findings highlight the long-term outcomes
expected if acute interventions are routinely withheld in patients with
mild-moderate premorbid disability and suggest that trials/registries
should include such patients.
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