Saiz-Vázquez Olalla, Ubillos-Landa Silvia, Puente-Martínez Alicia
Health Sciences Department, Universidad de Burgos, Burgos, Spain,
Health Sciences Department, Universidad de Burgos, Burgos, Spain.
Kidney Blood Press Res. 2025;50(1):481-495. doi: 10.1159/000546395. Epub 2025 Jun 5.
Several population-based studies have highlighted an association between stroke and dementia. Alzheimer's disease (AD)-related dementia and vascular dementia are the most common causes of dementia, with clear pathophysiological mechanisms for the latter. Given the ongoing debate surrounding the link between stroke and AD, a systematic meta-analysis was performed to determine their relationship and the possible influence of some moderators (sex, age, and region).
We searched five databases (ISI Web of Science, Scopus, PubMed, Elsevier ScienceDirect, and Google Scholar) with no initial publication date restriction, and the last search was conducted in 2022. We included longitudinal population-based studies assessing the stroke-AD association, selecting those with reported effect sizes, standardized AD diagnosis, and an AMSTAR score ≥9. Case reports, reviews, animal studies, and non-English publications were also excluded. The meta-analysis, conducted using Comprehensive Meta-Analysis 3.1, presented pooled log odds ratios (LogOR) with 95% confidence intervals, heterogeneity analysis (Cochran's Q, I2), and moderator analyses by age, sex, and region.
The meta-analysis included 3 meta-analyses and 12 primary studies, comprising a total of 14,207 stroke cases and 1,952 AD cases. Our analysis revealed a significant association between ischemic stroke (IS), hemorrhagic stroke (HS), and microinfarcts (MI) and the risk of AD. Despite some heterogeneity across studies, no significant differences were observed in the stroke-AD association based on age, sex, or region.
Our study describes the risk of AD in patients with episodes of stroke (IS, HS, and MI) and suggests that the risk of AD may be higher in stroke patients than in matched controls without stroke incidence. Moreover, the moderator analysis supports the robustness of our results. The link between stroke and AD suggests that stroke may accelerate cognitive decline. This calls for tighter vascular control and indicates worse prognosis in dementia progression.
多项基于人群的研究强调了中风与痴呆症之间的关联。阿尔茨海默病(AD)相关痴呆症和血管性痴呆是痴呆症最常见的病因,后者具有明确的病理生理机制。鉴于围绕中风与AD之间联系的持续争论,我们进行了一项系统的荟萃分析来确定它们之间的关系以及一些调节因素(性别、年龄和地区)可能产生的影响。
我们检索了五个数据库(ISI Web of Science、Scopus、PubMed、Elsevier ScienceDirect和谷歌学术),对初始发表日期没有限制,最后一次检索于2022年进行。我们纳入了基于人群的纵向研究,评估中风与AD的关联,选择那些报告了效应量、标准化AD诊断且AMSTAR评分≥9的研究。病例报告、综述、动物研究和非英文出版物也被排除。使用Comprehensive Meta-Analysis 3.1进行荟萃分析,呈现合并的对数比值比(LogOR)及95%置信区间、异质性分析( Cochr an's Q、I²),并按年龄、性别和地区进行调节因素分析。
荟萃分析纳入了3项荟萃分析和12项原始研究,共包括14207例中风病例和1952例AD病例。我们的分析揭示了缺血性中风(IS)、出血性中风(HS)和微梗死(MI)与AD风险之间存在显著关联。尽管各研究之间存在一定异质性,但基于年龄、性别或地区的中风与AD关联未观察到显著差异。
我们的研究描述了中风发作(IS、HS和MI)患者患AD的风险,并表明中风患者患AD的风险可能高于无中风发作的匹配对照组。此外,调节因素分析支持了我们结果的稳健性。中风与AD之间的联系表明中风可能加速认知衰退。这需要更严格的血管控制,并提示痴呆症进展的预后更差。