Associations Between Stroke Type, Ischemic Stroke Subtypes, and Post-Stroke Cognitive Trajectories

Author:

Levine Deborah A.ORCID,Whitney Rachael T.,Ye Wen,Briceño Emily M.ORCID,Gross Alden L.ORCID,Giordani Bruno J.ORCID,Sussman Jeremy B.ORCID,Lazar Ronald M.ORCID,Howard Virginia J.ORCID,Aparicio Hugo J.ORCID,Beiser Alexa S.ORCID,Elkind Mitchell S. V.ORCID,Gottesman Rebecca F.ORCID,Koton Silvia,Pendlebury Sarah T.ORCID,Kollipara Adam S.,Springer Mellanie V.ORCID,Seshadri SudhaORCID,Romero Jose R.ORCID,Fitzpatrick Annette L.,Longstreth William T.,Hayward Rodney A.

Abstract

ABSTRACTBackgroundIt is unclear how post-stroke cognitive trajectories differ by stroke type and ischemic stroke subtype. We studied associations between stroke types (ischemic, hemorrhagic), ischemic stroke subtypes (cardioembolic, large artery atherosclerotic, lacunar/small vessel, cryptogenic/other determined etiology), and post-stroke cognitive decline.MethodsThis pooled cohort analysis from four US cohort studies (1971-2019) identified 1,143 dementia-free individuals with acute stroke during follow-up: 1,061 (92.8%) ischemic, 82 (7.2%) hemorrhagic, 49.9% female, 30.8% Black. Median age at stroke was 74.1 (IQR, 68.6, 79.3) years. Outcomes were change in global cognition (primary) and changes in executive function and memory (secondary). Outcomes were standardized as T-scores (mean [SD], 50 [10]); a 1-point difference represents a 0.1-SD difference in cognition. Median follow-up for the primary outcome was 6.0 (IQR, 3.2, 9.2) years. Linear mixed-effects models estimated changes in cognition after stroke.ResultsOn average, the initial post-stroke global cognition score was 50.78 points (95% CI, 49.52, 52.03) in ischemic stroke survivors and did not differ in hemorrhagic stroke survivors (difference, -0.17 points [95% CI, -1.64, 1.30];P=0.82) after adjusting for demographics and pre-stroke cognition. On average, ischemic stroke survivors showed declines in global cognition, executive function, and memory. Post-stroke declines in global cognition, executive function, and memory did not differ between hemorrhagic and ischemic stroke survivors. 955 ischemic strokes had subtypes: 200 (20.9%) cardioembolic, 77 (8.1%) large artery atherosclerotic, 207 (21.7%) lacunar/small vessel, 471 (49.3%) cryptogenic/other determined etiology. On average, small vessel stroke survivors showed declines in global cognition and memory, but not executive function. Initial post-stroke cognitive scores and cognitive declines did not differ between small vessel survivors and survivors of other ischemic stroke subtypes. Post-stroke vascular risk factor levels did not attenuate associations.ConclusionStroke survivors had cognitive decline in multiple domains. Declines did not differ by stroke type or ischemic stroke subtype.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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