Reuters Health Information: Hemorrhagic stroke risk increased in older cirrhosis patients
Hemorrhagic stroke risk increased in older cirrhosis patients
Last Updated: 2017-06-06
By Anne Harding
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Older cirrhosis patients are at
increased risk of stroke, especially hemorrhagic stroke,
according to a new analysis of Medicare claims data published in
JAMA Neurology.
�This is in contrast to what was previously thought about
cirrhosis and stroke in general,� Dr. Neal S. Parikh of Weill
Cornell Medicine in New York City, the study�s first author,
told Reuters Health in a telephone interview. Physicians caring
for patients with cirrhosis should control other stroke risk
factors, such as hypertension, as aggressively as they would in
patients without cirrhosis, he said.
In their study, published online June 5, Dr. Parikh and his
team looked at inpatient and outpatient data for 2008-2015 for a
random 5% sample of more than 1.6 million Medicare beneficiaries
over 66 years old. One percent had cirrhosis.
During follow-up over a mean 4.3 years, 77,268 patients were
hospitalized with stroke. Annual stroke incidence was 2.17% for
the cirrhosis patients and 1.11% for those without cirrhosis.
The hazard ratio (HR) for stroke in cirrhosis patients was 1.4,
after accounting for demographic factors and stroke risk
factors. The association was stronger with intracerebral
hemorrhage (HR 1.9) and subarachnoid hemorrhage (HR 2.4)
compared to ischemic stroke (HR 1.3). Decompensated cirrhosis
was the type most strongly associated with stroke.
�It�s possible that our research will not generalize to
younger patients with cirrhosis,� Dr. Parikh said.
He and his colleagues now plan to investigate whether
cirrhosis is associated with intracranial aneurysms and rupture,
and whether the elevated stroke risk in cirrhosis patients
persists after liver transplant.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2ryvAtD
JAMA Neurology 2017.
|