‘One-third stroke survivors in city die or suffer another vascular event 6 months after discharge’

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Non communicable diseases including stroke are the leading killers in low and middle income countries like Pakistan.
A cross-sectional survey from a multiethnic transitional Pakistani community showed that almost a quarter of the respondents had suffered a cerebrovascular event – either a stroke or a Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA).
Thus, there is a need to generate regionally specific data from these regions to formulate effective management strategies for stroke survivors.
There are studies done in developed countries exploring the functional and cognitive outcomes of stroke.
Data from Pakistan is restricted to a few hospital based studies that have reported mortality and acute complications, but nothing is known of the post hospital outcomes of stroke survivors.
There are reasons to suspect that outcomes from stroke in developing countries like Pakistan may be sufficiently different from the developed world to merit investigation.
Stroke aetiology is different. Intracranial disease being more common, intracranial haemorrhage (ICH) constitutes a higher proportion of strokes, and patients are younger and ethnically distinct.
A recent study has highlighted this regional difference in stroke outcomes and mortality reported in various stroke trials.
Therefore, the primary objective of this study was to report the functional, cognitive and psychological outcomes of stroke survivors after discharge.
Secondary objective was to assess the frequency of recurrent vascular events in this population.
METHODS: This is a cross-sectional study. Patients were identified from the Aga Khan University Hospital (AKUH) Karachi.
This is a 650-bed, internationally accredited tertiary care hospital that caters to the needs of a large multiethnic urban population.
The hospital has a dedicated stroke unit run by trained nursing staff and neurologists that deals with 600 plus patients annually.
Men and women aged ≥ 18 years, with acute stroke during the study period (January 2010 to December 2010) were eligible.
All discharges from the stroke neurology service were identified from the medical record section using ICD code 430-438 and the relevant stroke pathways.
Acute stroke was defined by the WHO definition as “rapidly developing clinical signs of focal – at times global – disturbance of cerebral function, lasting more than 24 hours or leading to death with no apparent cause other than that of vascular origin”.
The diagnosis was supported by either a Computed Tomography scan or Magnetic Resonance Imaging.
All the discharges were contacted for interview. Those with whom a telephonic contact could be established within 1-12 months of their index stroke and who gave consent to a verbal interview were enrolled in the study.
In those who could not give consent directly, or were aphasic, surrogate consent was sought for interview and primary surrogate caregivers reported on the patient’s status. Those who had died of their index stroke during hospital stay were excluded from this study.
Subdural haemorrhages, traumatic ICH, iatrogenic stroke within hospital and all other diagnoses that presented like stroke but were subsequently found not to have stroke were also excluded.
A structured telephonic interview was carried out at 1-12 months post discharge. The questionnaire had been translated into Urdu using a translation/back-translation procedure to ensure clarity and consistency.
It collected data regarding outcomes and recurrent vascular events since discharge. For patients who had died during this time, a verbal autopsy questionnaire was administered to determine the proximate cause of their death.
A trained research officer (physician) established telephonic contact and carried out the interviews.
Once the telephonic interviews had been carried out, medical records of these patients were accessed for information on demographics, stroke subtype and risk factors.
The following scales were used for assessing the outcomes. For functional outcome, Modified Rankin Score (mRS) and Barthel Index (BI) was used.
For depression, Beck’s Depression Inventory (BDI) with direct questioning was used (for surrogate responders), and for dementia, we used the Blessed Dementia Scale (BDS).
Screening for recurrent stroke was done using a set of questions based on the Stroke Symptom Questionnaire.
Those who had been labelled by a physician as having a recurrent stroke or myocardial infarction (MI) were also included among those with recurrent events.
The protocol was approved by the Ethical Review Committee of the Aga Khan University Hospital (ERC #1541-Neu-ERC-2010).
Verbal informed consent was taken from all respondents and/or their legal surrogate respondent prior to interview since this was a telephonic interview.
Written consent could not be taken since these participants were identified via medical record discharges and contacted via phone.
The interview contents/form/script were reviewed and approved by the committee and thus verbal consent was approved.
DATA ANALYSIS: Reported stroke prevalence and complications of stroke has been ascertained through the literature and found to be 21 percent.
We used the figure of 0.21 for prevalence of exposure, along with 80 percent power, 0.05 significance level, 5 percent bond on error, and 20 percent adjustment for non-response rate give the sample size of 309.
Analysis was carried out using the Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS), version 11.5. Initially, descriptive statistics and frequencies were generated. Later, data were analysed using logistic regression.
In inferential statistics, continuous variables were checked for their linearity, by doing quartile analysis.
Dummy variables were created for variables with more than two categories and the reference group for each variable was defined as the category with the minimal risk for functional, cognitive and psychological outcomes associated with stroke, using previous studies.
Composites were created for functional outcome variable and depression. Poor functional outcome was defined as a composite of mRS > 2 and BI ≤ 90.
Depression was labelled if Beck’s score was > 10 for those patients who had provided information themselves.
For those who had surrogate responders, if at least three of the following four symptoms were reported to be present in the patient, he or she was labelled depressed: anger, flat affect, crying spells, and sleeplessness/low appetite. Score of 6-12 was taken as moderate and > 12 as severe dementia on BDS.
A composite variable of recurrent stroke was generated with physician confirming stroke as outcome or if the patient reported permanent neurological deficits (hemiparesis, hemianopsia, monocular blindness, facial deviation or dysphagia, dysarthria).
Physician report of angina or MI was also added to the recurrent stroke variable to form a composite of recurrent vascular event.
Multicollinearity was checked among all the independent variables. A univariate logistic regression analysis was conducted to assess the (crude) association of each independent factor with all three outcomes.
Biological significance and a p-value of 0.25 were considered as criteria for a variable to be significant in univariate analysis.
Biologically plausible interactions among variables and confounding were also checked. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was done and adjusted odds ratios (ORs) were calculated.
RESULTS: Data was collected from patients discharged from AKUH stroke service between January and December 2010.
During this period, 650 patients were admitted with acute cerebrovascular event. Subdural haemorrhages (n = 21) and in-hospital expiries (n = 45) were excluded.
All the other stroke patients/surrogate caregivers were then contacted for telephonic interviews over a period of 3 months.
Three hundred and nine patients/their surrogates consented and were included in the study. Median time from onset of stroke to outcome assessment was 5.5 months.
Of the 309 patients included in the study, 62.1 percent were women. Mean age was 61.75 years (IQR 21-90).
Of the 271 patients alive at the time of follow-up, all except one were being taken care of at home, and mostly (56.3 percent) by family members. None of the patients were in institutions or rehabilitation centres, despite the disability status.
Majority of the strokes were ischemic (78 percent). Of these, large artery atherosclerotic disease was the predominant etiologic subtype (35.3 percent).
Hypertension was the commonest risk factor (93.2 percent), followed by dyslipidemia (72.2 percent), diabetes (57.6 percent) and obesity (40.1 percent).
Forty five (6.9 percent) of the 650 total patients had died during the hospital admission period.
Of the remaining, 309 (51 percent) could be contacted. Thirty eight of these (12.3 percent) had died at the time of outcome assessment.
Of these, hemorrhagic strokes accounted for 26 percent of index strokes, while the rest were ischemic (12 were partial anterior circulation strokes, 10 were posterior circulation and 6 were lacunar strokes).
Verbal autopsy revealed the cause of death as vascular (stroke, MI or both) in 78 percent of these patients, with recurrent stroke being responsible for 65 percent of these mortalities.
In almost one third of the patients (31.5 percent), preventable complications, mostly infections related to stroke, were important contributors to mortality, and in four patients, these were the main cause of death.
When we look at long term mortality according to stroke subtype, we find that 9/38 (23 percent) of ICH patients and 29/38 (76 percent) ischemic stroke patients died.
Of ICH patients, which are hypertensive basal ganglia ICH, 9/64 (14 percent) died, and of ischemic stroke, 29/245 (11.8 percent) died.
When we look at how ischemic stroke subtype by TOAST criteria affects mortality in this group, mortality was as follows: Large Artery Atherosclerosis 11/98 (11.2 percent), Lacunes 4/51 (7.8 percent), Cardioembolic Stroke 9/32 (28 percent), unspecified 4/30 (13 percent). There were no mortalities in the ‘other specified’ group.
Of the 271 patients alive at the time of interviews, 64.9 percent reported at least one complication since discharge.
Pain was the commonest complication present in 126 (46.5 percent) patients, followed by constipation (33.6 percent) and urinary tract infection (15.9 percent).
Of those alive, 34.8 percent had moderate to severe disability defined as mRS > 2. BI indicated that 57.6 percent were independent and 15.9 percent were severely disabled (BI ≤ 30).
When a composite of mRS > 2 and BI ≤ 90 was taken, 51.1 percent of the patients had poor functional outcomes.
The following factors were independently associated with the odds of a poor outcome: older age (OR = 2.1, CI = 1.18-4.07), diabetes (2.1, 1.08-3.79), dementia (19.1, 5.1-71.8), post discharge complications and their increasing multiplicity (3.6, 1.21-11.09).
Moderate to severe dementia defined as BDS score of more than 5 was found in 114 (42.1 percent) of the 271 patients alive at the time of follow-up.
Moderate to severe dementia was more likely in patients who were depressed (OR = 6.86, CI = 3.3-14.1), had 3 or more post stroke complications (4.58, 1.5-14), had bedsores (17.137, 2.0-144.6), and had atrial fibrillation (5.12, 1.9-13.3).
Overall, 57 of the 271 surviving patients (21 percent) were depressed. When depression was evaluated, people with moderate to severe dementia were 16.6 times more likely to be depressed.
Sixty six (24.4 percent) of the 271 patients alive at the time of follow-up reported recurrent vascular events (stroke, MI or both).
Stroke was the most common recurrent event (62/271, 22.9 percent), making up 93 percent of recurrent events. Of the recurrent strokes, 37 had been confirmed by physicians.
DISCUSSION: We found that within a median of 5.5 months after discharge, at least one third of stroke survivors in Pakistan had either died due to vascular causes or suffered a recurrent vascular event, usually a stroke.
Despite sustained disability, the patients were homebound and cared for by family members with infrequent health personnel support.
Poor functional outcome was associated with patient characteristics like old age, diabetes, CAD, atrial fibrillation, stroke subtype – mainly cardioembolic – and medically preventable events like post stroke complications and their increasing multiplicity. About half the survivors had moderate to severe dementia and a quarter were depressed.
Our in-hospital mortality is comparable to Western figures with around 6 percent patients dying during index hospitalisation for stroke.
We report a 12 percent all cause mortality following hospital discharge at a median of 5 months.
A large inter-study variability exists in international literature, with 30 day mortality ranging between 5 percent and 25 percent and one year mortality of 17-24 percent. Regional data reports a much higher 28 day case fatality of 29.8 percent and 41 percent.
When we look at ischemic stroke subtypes and mortality, we find that cardioembolic strokes result in the greatest mortalities in this study, which is comparable to what is reported in the literature.
Often the outcome is better in lacunar strokes than non-lacunar strokes. However, while making these inferences and the ones that follow, caution must be applied, as our study is a cross-sectional one and a prospective cohort design would better reflect outcomes.
Around one half of our patients had poor functional outcomes based on mRS and BI. Studies from neighbouring India report a 38.5 percent moderate to severe disability in their stroke survivors based on mRS. Spain reports 37.7 percent functional dependence based on mRS.
Compared to these figures, our functional outcomes are worse. Predictors of poor functional outcomes in our study were older age, dementia and presence of post stroke complications, which are consistent with what has been reported in other studies.
Pooled data from 14 studies on acute stroke reports a 21.7 percent prevalence of depression post stroke, which is comparable to our rate of 21 percent.
Similarly, moderate to severe dementia and its predictors (old age and atrial fibrillation) were comparable to reported rates.
Of note was the strong association seen between depression and moderate to severe dementia (OR-16.6) that has also been previously reported.
One mechanism suggested for this association is stroke resulting in fronto-subcortical dysfunction that gives rise to depressive symptoms as well as dementia.
A quarter of our surviving patients suffered from recurrent vascular events, mostly strokes, after discharge at a median of 5.5 months post discharge.
This figure is much more than what is reported from other studies from around the world with 1 year rates in the range of 5.8-13.3 percent.
A potential explanation for this high stroke recurrence rate is the high number of patients with intracranial atherosclerotic disease (ICAD) – 35 percent – in our sample. ICAD is known to have the highest rate of recurrent stroke of around 14 percent per year.
Our study is the first systematic investigation of the state of stroke survivors in a low and middle income country like Pakistan.
Its strengths are its comprehensive approach, its coverage and access to all patient and uniformity of acute care.
The interviewer was a single trained physician following a tested refined questionnaire, with internationally standardised tools of assessment.
There are several limitations. First and foremost, we were unable to contact nearly half the patients who were discharged alive. This could have skewed our results in either direction.
Secondly, this is a single centre study and the care that these patients received may bias towards better functional outcomes.
Thirdly, since this was a cross-sectional study, we do not have longitudinal data on outcomes of individual patients.
It is known that improvement in functional status continues to happen for 3-6 months after stroke and some of those interviewed earlier may still have been improving at the time of interview.
Our sub-analysis, however, did not show any significant difference in outcomes of patients interviewed at 1-5 months and those interviewed later.
Fourthly, although the outcome scales that we used have been validated for telephonic interviews, Urdu translation/cross-cultural factors may have affected results. Also, difficulty in data collection and quality rating were not evaluated.
However, after pre-testing the Urdu version, the interviewer made sure that appropriate “trigger words” were used to avoid translational communication errors.
Direct observation and examination may have uncovered more cognitive issues and depression than reported. Surrogate responders may have introduced bias in reporting for depression outcomes.
CONCLUSIONS: Our study has provided valuable insight into what happens to stroke survivors in low and middle income countries once they leave the hospital.
Even gains achieved in a dedicated stroke unit are diluted. Physicians and caregivers both need to focus on preventable post stroke complications.
In addition, a public health approach to broader preventive measures to avoid catastrophic disabling strokes will also be a viable way forward.
Solutions for the current resource poor situation include caregiver training for both rehabilitation and skills to recognise cognitive and psychological complications before the patient goes home.
Future trials that assess the impact of caregiver education and support, home based rehabilitation and community based reintegration of Pakistani stroke survivors are likely to have broader relevance in this region.
Extracted from the research article titled ‘Functional, cognitive and psychological outcomes, and recurrent vascular events in Pakistani stroke survivors: a cross-sectional study’ authored by Maria Khan, Bilal Ahmed, Maryam Ahmed, Myda Najeeb, Emmon Raza, Farid Khan, Anoosh Moin, Dania Shujaat, Ahmed Arshad and Ayeesha Kamran Kamal.