Howard George, Kissela Brett M, Kleindorfer Dawn O, McClure Leslie A, Soliman Elsayed Z, Judd Suzanne E, Rhodes J David, Cushman Mary, Moy Claudia S, Sands Kara A, Howard Virginia J
From the Departments of Biostatistics (G.H., L.A.M., S.E.J., J.D.R.) and Epidemiology (V.J.H.), UAB School of Public Health, Birmingham, AL; Department of Neurology (B.M.K., D.O.K.), School of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, OH; Department of Epidemiology (E.Z.S.), Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC; Department of Medicine (M.C.), University of Vermont College of Medicine, Burlington; National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (C.S.M.), NIH, Bethesda, MD; and Department of Neurology (K.A.S.), UAB School of Medicine, Birmingham, AL.
Neurology. 2016 Feb 16;86(7):637-42. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000002376. Epub 2016 Jan 20.
To assess whether black race and other cerebrovascular risk factors have a differential effect on first vs. recurrent stroke events.
Estimate the differences in the magnitude of the association of demographic (age, back race, sex) or stroke risk factors (hypertension, diabetes, cigarette smoking, atrial fibrillation, left ventricular hypertrophy, or heart disease) for first vs. recurrent stroke from a longitudinal cohort study of 29,682 black or white participants aged 45 years and older.
Over an average 6.8 years follow-up, 301 of 2,993 participants with a previous stroke at baseline had a recurrent stroke, while 818 of 26,689 participants who were stroke-free at baseline had a first stroke. Among those stroke-free at baseline, there was an age-by-race interaction (p = 0.0002), with a first stroke risk 2.70 (95% confidence interval: 1.86-3.91) times greater for black than white participants at age 45, but no racial disparity at age 85 (hazard ratio = 0.91; 95% confidence interval: 0.70-1.18). In contrast, there was no evidence of a higher risk of recurrent stroke at any age for black participants (p > 0.05). The association of traditional stroke risk factors was generally similar for first and recurrent stroke.
The association of age and black race differs substantially on first vs. recurrent stroke risk, with risk factors playing a similar role.
评估黑人种族及其他脑血管危险因素对首次与复发性卒中事件是否有不同影响。
从一项对29682名年龄在45岁及以上的黑人和白人参与者进行的纵向队列研究中,估计人口统计学因素(年龄、黑人种族、性别)或卒中危险因素(高血压、糖尿病、吸烟、心房颤动、左心室肥厚或心脏病)与首次和复发性卒中关联程度的差异。
在平均6.8年的随访中,基线时有过卒中的2993名参与者中有301人发生复发性卒中,而基线时无卒中的26689名参与者中有818人发生首次卒中。在基线时无卒中的参与者中,存在年龄与种族的交互作用(p = 0.0002),45岁时黑人参与者首次卒中风险是白人参与者的2.70倍(95%置信区间:1.86 - 3.91),但85岁时无种族差异(风险比 = 0.91;95%置信区间:0.70 - 1.18)。相比之下,没有证据表明黑人参与者在任何年龄复发性卒中风险更高(p > 0.05)。传统卒中危险因素与首次和复发性卒中的关联总体相似。
年龄与黑人种族对首次与复发性卒中风险的关联有很大差异,危险因素起类似作用。