Gümbel Danilo Christian, Tanislav Christian, Konrad Marcel, Jacob Louis, Koyanagi Ai, Smith Lee, Kostev Karel
University Clinic, Philipps-University, 35043 Marburg, Germany.
Department of Geriatrics and Neurology, Diakonie Hospital Jung Stilling, 57074 Siegen, Germany.
Healthcare (Basel). 2023 Jul 2;11(13):1913. doi: 10.3390/healthcare11131913.
the aim of the present study is to investigate the associations between syncope and subsequent diagnoses of brain tumor, cardiac arrhythmia, stroke/transient ischemic attack (TIA), epilepsy, and anxiety disorder in a large outpatient population in Germany.
This retrospective cohort study uses data from the Disease Analyzer database (IQVIA). Adults who received syncope diagnosis from one of 1284 general practices between January 2005 and December 2021 (index date) were included and matched (1:1) to individuals without syncope diagnosis using a propensity score based on age, sex, the number of consultations during the follow-up period (up to 6 months), and defined co-diagnoses documented within 12 months prior to and on the index date. Finally, associations between syncope and subsequent outcome diagnoses were investigated using multivariable logistic regression models.
Data related to 64,016 patients with and 64,016 patients without syncope (mean age 54.5 years, 56.5% female) were available. In total, 6.43% of syncope patients and 2.14% of non-syncope patients were diagnosed with one of the five outcome diagnoses within 6 months of the index date. There was a positive and significant association between syncope and incidences of ischemic stroke/TIA (OR = 2.83, 95% CI = 2.41-3.32), arrhythmia (OR = 3.81, 95% CI = 3.44-4.18), brain tumor (OR = 4.24, 95% CI = 2.50-7.19), epilepsy (OR = 5.52, 95% CI = 4.27-7.14), and anxiety disorder (OR = 1.99, 95% CI = 1.79-2.21).
Syncope is significantly associated with an increased risk of subsequent ischemic stroke/TIA, cardiac arrhythmia, brain tumor, epilepsy, and anxiety disorder. Nevertheless, the cumulative incidences for all five diagnoses are very low.
本研究旨在调查德国大量门诊患者中晕厥与后续脑肿瘤、心律失常、中风/短暂性脑缺血发作(TIA)、癫痫和焦虑症诊断之间的关联。
这项回顾性队列研究使用了疾病分析器数据库(IQVIA)的数据。纳入了2005年1月至2021年12月期间在1284家普通诊所之一接受晕厥诊断的成年人(索引日期),并使用基于年龄、性别、随访期间(最长6个月)的会诊次数以及索引日期前12个月内和索引日期记录的确定的共诊断情况的倾向评分,将其与未接受晕厥诊断的个体进行1:1匹配。最后,使用多变量逻辑回归模型研究晕厥与后续结局诊断之间的关联。
获得了64016例有晕厥患者和64016例无晕厥患者的数据(平均年龄54.5岁,女性占56.5%)。在索引日期后的6个月内,共有6.43%的晕厥患者和2.14%的非晕厥患者被诊断出患有五种结局诊断中的一种。晕厥与缺血性中风/TIA的发生率(OR = 2.83,95% CI = 2.41 - 3.32)、心律失常(OR = 3.81,95% CI = 3.44 - 4.18)、脑肿瘤(OR = 4.24,95% CI = 2.50 - 7.19)、癫痫(OR = 5.52,95% CI = 4.27 - 7.14)和焦虑症(OR = 1.99,95% CI = 1.79 - 2.21)之间存在正相关且显著关联。
晕厥与后续缺血性中风/TIA、心律失常、脑肿瘤、癫痫和焦虑症风险增加显著相关。然而,所有五种诊断的累积发生率都非常低。