Chaturvedi S, Ansell J, Recht L
Department of Neurology, University of Massachusetts Medical Center, Worcester 01655.
Stroke. 1994 Jun;25(6):1215-8. doi: 10.1161/01.str.25.6.1215.
Previous studies, mainly autopsy-based, suggest that the spectrum of stroke in cancer patients differs from that of the general population. These studies also suggest that cerebrovascular events frequently are a manifestation of hypercoagulability. However, no studies that address this question in the adult oncological population from a clinical perspective are available. We therefore assessed the clinical impact of cerebral ischemic events in cancer patients and attempted to determine whether their occurrence represents a manifestation of Trousseau's syndrome.
A computerized database that records all neurological admissions and consultations at a tertiary medical center was used to retrospectively identify all patients with cerebral ischemic events and cancer.
Thirty-three patients representing 3.5% of all stroke consultations and admissions seen at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center were identified during the period 1988 through 1992. Large-vessel atherosclerosis was the most frequent cause of stroke. Furthermore, although 30% were determined to have hypercoagulability as a cause using clinical criteria, in only one of nine patients in whom tests were done was sufficient evidence present to make a presumptive diagnosis of disseminated intravascular coagulation. Irrespective of therapy, recurrent cerebral ischemic events were noted in only 6% of patients during a follow-up period averaging greater than 9 months, a figure that is similar to that for the risk of repeated events in the noncancer population.
Recognizing the limitations of this retrospective study, it appears nonetheless that conventional stroke origins account for the majority of cerebral ischemic events in the adult cancer population. Although hypercoagulability is present to a greater extent than in the nononcological population, recurrent strokes seem to occur no more frequently than in the nononcological population, and antiplatelet agents seem sufficient therapy for most patients.
以往的研究(主要基于尸检)表明,癌症患者的卒中谱与普通人群不同。这些研究还提示,脑血管事件常是高凝状态的一种表现。然而,尚无从临床角度针对成年肿瘤患者群体探讨这一问题的研究。因此,我们评估了癌症患者脑缺血事件的临床影响,并试图确定其发生是否代表了Trousseau综合征的一种表现。
利用一个记录某三级医疗中心所有神经科住院及会诊情况的计算机数据库,回顾性地识别所有患有脑缺血事件和癌症的患者。
在1988年至1992年期间,共识别出33例患者,占马萨诸塞大学医学中心所有卒中会诊及住院病例的3.5%。大动脉粥样硬化是卒中最常见的病因。此外,尽管根据临床标准确定30%的患者存在高凝状态为病因,但在接受检测的9例患者中,仅有1例有足够证据作出弥散性血管内凝血的推定诊断。无论采用何种治疗方法,在平均随访时间超过9个月的期间内,仅6%的患者出现复发性脑缺血事件,这一数字与非癌症人群中再次发生事件的风险相似。
尽管认识到这项回顾性研究存在局限性,但成年癌症人群中的大多数脑缺血事件似乎由传统的卒中病因引起。虽然高凝状态在癌症人群中比非肿瘤人群更常见,但复发性卒中的发生频率似乎并不高于非肿瘤人群,并且抗血小板药物似乎对大多数患者来说是足够的治疗方法。