First stroke incidence, causes, treatments, and outcomes for Aboriginal Peoples in South Australia and the Northern Territory: a pilot prospective study

Author:

Dos Santos (Gumbaynggirr, Kwiamble) Angela12ORCID,Cheong Edmund3,Balabanski Anna H45,Goldsmith Kendall6,Burchill (Yorta Yorta, Dja Dja Wurrung) Luke7,Burrow James8,Brady Stephen9,Alam Ferdous10,Parsons Mark211,Katzenellenbogen Judith M12,Thrift Amanda G4ORCID,Kleinig Timothy J313ORCID,Brown (Wadi Wadi) Alex14

Affiliation:

1. The University of Melbourne Melbourne VIC

2. University of New South Wales Sydney NSW

3. Royal Adelaide Hospital Adelaide SA

4. Monash University Melbourne VIC

5. Alfred Health Melbourne VIC

6. The University of South Australia Adelaide SA

7. Mayo Clinic Rochester MN USA

8. Royal Darwin Hospital Darwin NT

9. Alice Springs Hospital Alice Springs NT

10. Whyalla Hospital and Health Services Whyalla SA

11. Liverpool Hospital Sydney NSW

12. Cardiovascular Epidemiology Research Centre University of Western Australia Perth WA

13. The University of Adelaide Adelaide SA

14. National Centre for Indigenous Genomics Australian National University Canberra ACT

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveWe performed a pilot stroke incidence study, focused on feasibility and inclusion of the CONSIDER reporting guidelines, to model the design of a future population‐based study aiming to definitively determine stroke incidence, antecedents, treatment, and outcomes.Study designProspective stroke incidence study (pilot study).Setting, participantsAll people aged 15 years or older who lived in postcode‐defined areas of South Australia and Northern Territory (885 472 people, including 45 127 Aboriginal people [5.1%]) diagnosed with stroke for the first time during 1 October – 31 December 2015 and admitted to public hospitals or stroke and transient ischaemic attack clinics.Main outcome measuresFeasibility of a prospective population‐based stroke incidence study.ResultsOf the 123 participants with first strokes, ten were Aboriginal (8%); the median age of Aboriginal people was 45 years (interquartile range [IQR], 33–55 years), of non‐Indigenous people 73 years (IQR, 62–84 years). For Aboriginal people, the age‐standardised incidence of stroke was 104 (95% confidence interval [CI], 84–124) per 100 000 person‐years, for non‐Indigenous people 33 (95% CI, 22–44) per 100 000 person‐years. We found that a prospective population‐based stroke incidence study in Aboriginal people was feasible, including with respect to establishing an adequate sample size, diagnostic confirmation, identification of incident stroke, confirming stroke subtypes, establishing a stable statistical population, standardising data reporting for comparison with other stroke incidence studies, and ethical research reporting that conforms to CONSIDER guidelines.ConclusionsA larger, population‐based study of the incidence of stroke in Aboriginal people is both feasible and needed to provide robust estimates of stroke incidence, antecedents, treatments and outcomes to help guide strategies for reducing the risk of and outcomes of stroke in Aboriginal people.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference27 articles.

1. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.Australia's health 2020: in brief [Australia's health series no. 17; cat. no. AUS 232]. 23 July 2020.https://www.aihw.gov.au/getmedia/2aa9f51b‐dbd6‐4d56‐8dd4‐06a10ba7cae8/aihw‐aus‐232.pdf.aspx?inline=true(viewed Aug 2021).

2. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.Heart stroke and vascular disease: Australian facts. 14 Dec 2023.https://www.aihw.gov.au/reports/heart‐stroke‐vascular‐diseases/hsvd‐facts(viewed Apr 2024).

3. Stroke incidence and subtypes in Aboriginal people in remote Australia: a healthcare network population-based study

4. Excess stroke incidence in young Aboriginal people in South Australia: Pooled results from two population-based studies

5. Stroke Incidence and Case-Fatality among Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Populations in the Northern Territory of Australia, 1999–2011

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