From the Departments of Epidemiology (L.D.L., E.C., M.A.S, L.B.M.) and Biostatistics (S.K., J.L.), University of Michigan School of Public Health; Stroke Program (L.D.L., D.L.B., D.B.Z., K.A.K., W.J.M., M.A.S, L.B.M.) and Department of Emergency Medicine (W.J.M., L.B.M.), University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor; and CHRISTUS Spohn Hospitals (M.S.C.), CHRISTUS Health System, Corpus Christi, TX.
Neurology. 2021 Nov 30;97(22):e2164-e2172. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000012877. Epub 2021 Sep 28.
To compare 18-year (2000-2017) temporal trends in ischemic stroke rates by ethnicity, sex, and age.
Data are from a population-based stroke surveillance study conducted in Nueces County, Texas, a geographically isolated, biethnic, urban community. Active (screening hospital admission logs, hospital wards, intensive care units) and passive (screening inpatient/emergency department discharge diagnosis codes) surveillance were used to identify cases aged ≥45 (n = 4,875) validated by stroke physicians using a consistent stroke definition over time. Ischemic stroke rates were derived from Poisson regression using annual population counts from the US Census to estimate the at-risk population.
In those aged 45-59 years, rates increased in non-Hispanic Whites (104.3% relative increase; < 0.001) but decreased in Mexican Americans (-21.9%; = 0.03) such that rates were significantly higher in non-Hispanic Whites in 2016-2017 ( for ethnicity-time interaction < 0.001). In those age 60-74, rates declined in both groups but more so in Mexican Americans (non-Hispanic Whites -18.2%, = 0.05; Mexican Americans -40.1%, = 0.002), resulting in similar rates for the 2 groups in 2016-2017 ( for ethnicity-time interaction = 0.06). In those aged ≥75, trends did not vary by ethnicity, with declines noted in both groups (non-Hispanic Whites -33.7%, = 0.002; Mexican Americans -26.9%, = 0.02). Decreases in rates were observed in men (age 60-74, -25.7%, = 0.009; age ≥75, -39.2%, = 0.002) and women (age 60-74, -34.3%, = 0.007; age ≥75, -24.0%, = 0.02) in the 2 older age groups, while rates did not change in either sex in those age 45-59.
Previously documented ethnic stroke incidence disparities have ended as a result of declining rates in Mexican Americans and increasing rates in non-Hispanic Whites, most notably in midlife.
比较 2000-2017 年间按种族、性别和年龄划分的缺血性中风发病率的 18 年(18 年)时间趋势。
数据来自德克萨斯州努埃塞斯县进行的一项基于人群的中风监测研究,该县地理位置孤立,是一个拥有两种族裔的城市社区。主动(筛查住院患者日志、病房、重症监护病房)和被动(筛查住院/急诊部门出院诊断代码)监测用于识别年龄≥45 岁的病例(n=4875),这些病例由中风医生根据一致的中风定义进行验证,随着时间的推移。使用美国人口普查的年度人口计数,从泊松回归中得出缺血性中风发病率,以估计高危人群。
在 45-59 岁年龄组中,非西班牙裔白种人的发病率(相对增加 104.3%;<0.001)增加,但墨西哥裔美国人的发病率(减少 21.9%;=0.03)下降,导致非西班牙裔白种人在 2016-2017 年的发病率显著升高(种族-时间交互作用<0.001)。在 60-74 岁年龄组中,两组的发病率均下降,但墨西哥裔美国人下降更为明显(非西班牙裔白种人-18.2%,=0.05;墨西哥裔美国人-40.1%,=0.002),导致 2016-2017 年两组的发病率相似(种族-时间交互作用=0.06)。在≥75 岁年龄组中,种族间趋势无差异,两组均有下降(非西班牙裔白种人-33.7%,=0.002;墨西哥裔美国人-26.9%,=0.02)。在 60-74 岁年龄组中,男性(-25.7%,=0.009)和女性(-34.3%,=0.007)的发病率下降,≥75 岁年龄组的发病率下降更为明显(男性-39.2%,=0.002;女性-24.0%,=0.02),而在 45-59 岁年龄组中,无论性别如何,发病率均无变化。
由于墨西哥裔美国人的发病率下降和非西班牙裔白种人的发病率上升,先前记录的种族间中风发病率差异已经结束,尤其是在中年。