From the Department of Neurology (M.S.E., J.I.V., C.J.M.K., F.-E.d.L.), Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Medical Centre, Nijmegen; and Julius Center for Health Sciences and Primary Care (I.V.) and Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Brain Center Rudolf Magnus (K.M.v.N., C.J.M.K.), University Medical Center Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Neurology. 2019 May 21;92(21):e2444-e2454. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000007533. Epub 2019 Apr 24.
To investigate incidence of stroke and its subtypes in young adults, according to sex and age, and to study trends over time.
We established a nationwide cohort through linkage of national registries (hospital discharge, cause of death, and population register) with patients aged 18-50 years and those ≥50 years with first-ever ischemic stroke, intracerebral hemorrhage, or unspecified stroke, using ICD-9/ICD-10 codes between 1998 and 2010 in the Netherlands. Outcomes were yearly incidence of stroke stratified by age, sex, and stroke subtype, its changes over time, and comparison of incidence in patients 18-50 years to patients ≥50 years.
We identified 15,257 patients (53% women; mean age 41.8 years). Incidence increased exponentially with age ( = 0.99) and was higher for women than men, most prominently in the youngest patients (18-44 years). The relative proportion of ischemic stroke increased with age (18-24 years: 38.3%; 44-49 years: 56.5%), whereas the relative proportion of intracerebral hemorrhage decreased (18-24 years: 34.0%; 44-49 years: 18.3%). Incidence of any stroke in young adults increased (1998: 14.0/100,000 person-years: 2010: 17.2; +23%; < 0.001), driven by an increase in those aged over 35 years and ischemic stroke incidence (46%), whereas incidence decreased in those ≥50 years (329.1%-292.2%; -11%; = 0.009).
Incidence of any stroke in the young increases with age in patients over 35, is higher in women than men aged 18-44 years, and has increased by 23% in one decade, through an increase in ischemic stroke. Incidence of intracerebral hemorrhage is comparable for women and men and remained stable over time.
根据性别和年龄,调查年轻人中风及其亚型的发病率,并研究随时间的变化趋势。
我们通过将国家登记册(医院出院、死因和人口登记册)与荷兰 1998 年至 2010 年期间使用 ICD-9/ICD-10 代码诊断的首次缺血性中风、脑出血或未指定中风的 18-50 岁和≥50 岁的患者进行链接,建立了一个全国性队列。结果为按年龄、性别和中风亚型分层的每年中风发病率、随时间的变化以及 18-50 岁患者与≥50 岁患者发病率的比较。
我们确定了 15257 名患者(53%为女性;平均年龄 41.8 岁)。发病率随年龄呈指数增长( = 0.99),女性高于男性,在最年轻的患者(18-44 岁)中最为明显。缺血性中风的相对比例随年龄增加(18-24 岁:38.3%;44-49 岁:56.5%),而脑出血的相对比例下降(18-24 岁:34.0%;44-49 岁:18.3%)。年轻人中风的任何发病率都有所增加(1998 年:14.0/100,000 人年;2010 年:17.2;增加 23%;<0.001),这是由于≥35 岁患者和缺血性中风发病率(46%)的增加所致,而≥50 岁患者的发病率则下降(329.1%-292.2%;-11%;=0.009)。
在≥35 岁的患者中,任何年龄的年轻人中风发病率随年龄增加,18-44 岁的女性发病率高于男性,在十年内增加了 23%,这是由于缺血性中风的增加。脑出血在女性和男性中的发病率相当,且随时间保持稳定。