Affiliation:
1. From Departments of Neurology (A.W., L.M., P.K., D.D.) and Public Health (H.L., E.S.), Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands; Department of Neurology (L.M.), van Weel-Bethesda Hospital, Dirksland, the Netherlands.
Abstract
Background and Purpose—
In patients with a recent TIA or minor stroke, prediction of long-term risk of major vascular events is important, but difficult. We aimed to study the external validity of currently available prediction models.
Methods—
We validated predictions from 3 population-based models (Framingham, SCORE, and INDIANA project) and 4 stroke cohort-based models (Stroke Prognosis Instrument II, Oxford TIA, Dutch TIA study, and the ABCD
2
study) in an independent cohort of patients with a recent TIA or minor stroke. The validation cohort consisted of 592 patients with TIA or minor stroke, with a mean follow-up of 2 years. The primary outcome was the 2-year risk of the composite outcome event of nonfatal stroke, myocardial infarction, or vascular death. We used calibration graphs and c-statistics to evaluate the 7 models.
Results—
The 2-year risk of the primary outcome event was 12%. Calibration was adequate for stroke population-based studies. After adjustment for baseline risk and for prevalence of risk factors, calibration was adequate for the Dutch TIA, the ABCD
2
, and Stroke Prognosis Instrument II models. Discrimination ranged from 0.61 to 0.68.
Conclusions—
Discrimination was poor for all currently available risk prediction models for patients with a recent TIA or minor stroke, indicating the need for stronger predictors. Clinical usefulness may be best for the ABCD
2
model, which had a limited number of easily obtainable variables, a reasonable c-statistic (0.64), and good calibration.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Advanced and Specialised Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Clinical Neurology
Cited by
26 articles.
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