Patient-reported, health-related, quality of life after stroke thrombectomy in clinical practice

Author:

Deb-Chatterji Milani,Konnopka Alexander,Flottmann Fabian,Leischner Hannes,Fiehler JensORCID,Gerloff Christian,Thomalla Götz

Abstract

ObjectiveTo determine patient-reported health-related quality of life (HRQOL) after stroke thrombectomy in clinical practice and to identify predictors of better HRQOL by analyzing data of 504 consecutive patients treated in a large university stroke center.MethodsAll patients with stroke treated by thrombectomy (June 2015–October 2018) were prospectively enrolled in this observational study. At 90 days, functional outcome was assessed by the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) and patient-reported HRQOL was assessed by the EuroQol Group 5-Dimension (EQ-5D) self-report questionnaire, consisting of 5 health domains. The EQ-5D utility index (EQ-5D-I) score (−0.594 to 1.00, with higher values indicating better HRQOL) was calculated. Linear regression analysis was applied to identify predictors of better HRQOL (higher EQ-5D-I score).ResultsOf 504 patients (median age 76 years, 51.8% female), the mean EQ-5D-I score was 0.39 (SD 0.44). The proportion of stroke survivors who reported complaints in the different domains decreased from 66% in Usual Activities to 57% in Mobility, 50.4% in Self-Care, 41.7% in Pain/Discomfort, and 40.8% Anxiety/Depression. Lower age, lower prestroke mRS score, lower baseline NIH Stroke Scale score, higher Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score, concomitant thrombolysis therapy, and a successful recanalization were independent predictors of better HRQOL.ConclusionsPatient-reported HRQOL provides a more comprehensive assessment of stroke outcome than the mRS score. Health domains involving motor function most frequently showed complaints in HRQOL after stroke thrombectomy, while a large proportion of patients did not report any complaints across the different health domains. Predictors of better HRQOL closely match the predictors of better functional outcome measured by the mRS in other thrombectomy studies.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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