The impact of post-stroke complications on in-hospital mortality depends on stroke severity

Author:

Bustamante Alejandro1,Giralt Dolors1,García-Berrocoso Teresa1,Rubiera Marta2,Álvarez-Sabín José2,Molina Carlos2,Serena Joaquín3,Montaner Joan12

Affiliation:

1. Neurovascular Research Laboratory, Institut de Recerca, Hospital Universitari Vall d’Hebron-Universitat Autónoma de Barcelona, Spain

2. Stroke Unit, Department of Neurology, Hospital Universitari Vall d’Hebron, Spain

3. Department of Neurology, Hospital Universitario Dr. Josep Trueta, IdIBGi (Institut d'Investigació Biomèdica de Girona), Spain

Abstract

Introduction Controversies remain on whether post-stroke complications represent an independent predictor of poor outcome or just a reflection of stroke severity. We aimed to identify which post-stroke complications have the highest impact on in-hospital mortality by using machine learning techniques. Secondary aim was identification of patient’s subgroups in which complications have the highest impact. Patients and methods Registro Nacional de Ictus de la Sociedad Española de Neurología is a stroke registry from 42 centers from the Spanish Neurological Society. Data from ischemic stroke patients were used to build a random forest by combining 500 classification and regression trees, to weight up the impact of baseline characteristics and post-stroke complications on in-hospital mortality. With the selected variables, a logistic regression analysis was performed to test for interactions. Results 12,227 ischemic stroke patients were included. In-hospital mortality was 5.9% and median hospital stay was 7(4–10) days. Stroke severity [National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale > 10, OR = 5.54(4.55–6.99)], brain edema [OR = 18.93(14.65–24.46)], respiratory infections [OR = 3.67(3.02–4.45)] and age [OR = 2.50(2.07–3.03) for >77 years] had the highest impact on in-hospital mortality in random forest, being independently associated with in-hospital mortality. Complications have higher odds ratios in patients with baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale <10. Discussion Our study identified brain edema and respiratory infections as independent predictors of in-hospital mortality, rather than just markers of more severe strokes. Moreover, its impact was higher in less severe strokes, despite lower frequency. Conclusion Brain edema and respiratory infections were the complications with a greater impact on in-hospital mortality, with the highest impact in patients with mild strokes. Further efforts on the prediction of these complications could improve stroke outcome.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Clinical Neurology

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