Prevalence of patent foramen ovale in the Greek population is high and impacts on the interpretation of the risk of paradoxical embolism (RoPE) score

Author:

Koutroulou Ioanna1,Tsivgoulis Georgios2ORCID,Karacostas Dimitris1,Ikonomidis Ignatios3,Grigoriadis Nikolaos1,Karapanayiotides Theodoros4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 2nd Department of Neurology, AHEPA University Hospital, School of Health Sciences, Department of Medicine, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece

2. 2nd Department of Neurology, Attikon University Hospital, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece

3. 2nd Department of Cardiology, Attikon University Hospital, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece

4. 2nd Department of Neurology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, AHEPA University Hospital, S.Kyriakidi 1, Thessaloniki, 54636, Greece

Abstract

Background: The risk of paradoxical embolism (RoPE) score calculates the probability that patent foramen ovale (PFO) is causally related to stroke (PFO attributable fraction, PFOAF), based on PFO prevalence in patients with cryptogenic stroke (CS) compared with that in the general population. The latter has been estimated at 25%; however, PFO prevalence in nonselected populations varies widely. Methods: Since PFO prevalence in Greece remains unknown, we evaluated it and we calculated PFOAF stratified by RoPE score in a cohort of patients with CS ⩽55 years old. PFO was detected according to the international consensus transcranial Doppler (TCD) criteria in 124 healthy subjects (H), in 102 patients with CS, and in 56 patients with stroke of known cause (nonCS). Each subject underwent unilateral middle cerebral artery recording after infusion of agitated saline, at rest, and after a controlled Valsalva maneuver. We characterized PFO as large (>20 microbubbles or curtain), moderate (11–20), and small (⩽10). Results: PFO was detected in 42.7% of H, 49% of CS, and 25% of nonCS ( p = 0.013). Large PFOs were numerically higher in CS [28.4% (29/102)] compared with H [19.3% (24/124); p = 0.1] and to nonCS [7.1% (4/56), p = 0.04]. The median RoPE score in patients with CS and PFO was seven. Even patients with very high RoPE score (9–10) had moderate PFOAF (57%). For any individual stratum up to RopE score 8, PFOAF was <33%. Conclusions: PFO prevalence in the Greek population is much higher than the widely accepted 25%. PFO may be the cause of stroke in one out of nine Greek patients with CS. Among Greek CS patients who harbor a PFO, the latter is causal in one out of five. The established RoPE score cutoff of ⩾7 for having a probable PFO-associated stroke may overestimate the probability in patients deriving from populations with high PFO prevalence.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology,Pharmacology

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