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. 2019 Jul;18(7):653-665.
doi: 10.1016/S1474-4422(19)30197-8. Epub 2019 May 23.

Cerebral microbleeds and stroke risk after ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack: a pooled analysis of individual patient data from cohort studies

Duncan Wilson  1 Gareth Ambler  2 Keon-Joo Lee  3 Jae-Sung Lim  4 Masayuki Shiozawa  5 Masatoshi Koga  5 Linxin Li  6 Caroline Lovelock  6 Hugues Chabriat  7 Michael Hennerici  8 Yuen Kwun Wong  9 Henry Ka Fung Mak  10 Luis Prats-Sánchez  11 Alejandro Martínez-Domeño  11 Shigeru Inamura  12 Kazuhisa Yoshifuji  12 Ethem Murat Arsava  13 Solveig Horstmann  14 Jan Purrucker  14 Bonnie Yin Ka Lam  15 Adrian Wong  15 Young Dae Kim  16 Tae-Jin Song  17 Maarten Schrooten  18 Robin Lemmens  19 Sebastian Eppinger  20 Thomas Gattringer  20 Ender Uysal  21 Zeynep Tanriverdi  21 Natan M Bornstein  22 Einor Ben Assayag  22 Hen Hallevi  22 Jun Tanaka  23 Hideo Hara  23 Shelagh B Coutts  24 Lisa Hert  25 Alexandros Polymeris  25 David J Seiffge  26 Philippe Lyrer  25 Ale Algra  27 Jaap Kappelle  28 Rustam Al-Shahi Salman  29 Hans R Jäger  30 Gregory Y H Lip  31 Heinrich P Mattle  32 Leonidas D Panos  32 Jean-Louis Mas  33 Laurence Legrand  34 Christopher Karayiannis  35 Thanh Phan  36 Sarah Gunkel  37 Nicolas Christ  37 Jill Abrigo  38 Thomas Leung  39 Winnie Chu  38 Francesca Chappell  40 Stephen Makin  41 Derek Hayden  42 David J Williams  43 M Eline Kooi  44 Dianne H K van Dam-Nolen  45 Carmen Barbato  46 Simone Browning  46 Kim Wiegertjes  47 Anil M Tuladhar  47 Noortje Maaijwee  48 Christine Guevarra  49 Chathuri Yatawara  49 Anne-Marie Mendyk  50 Christine Delmaire  50 Sebastian Köhler  51 Robert van Oostenbrugge  52 Ying Zhou  53 Chao Xu  53 Saima Hilal  54 Bibek Gyanwali  54 Christopher Chen  54 Min Lou  53 Julie Staals  52 Régis Bordet  50 Nagaendran Kandiah  49 Frank-Erik de Leeuw  47 Robert Simister  46 Aad van der Lugt  45 Peter J Kelly  42 Joanna M Wardlaw  40 Yannie Soo  39 Felix Fluri  37 Velandai Srikanth  35 David Calvet  33 Simon Jung  32 Vincent I H Kwa  55 Stefan T Engelter  56 Nils Peters  56 Eric E Smith  24 Yusuke Yakushiji  23 Dilek Necioglu Orken  21 Franz Fazekas  20 Vincent Thijs  57 Ji Hoe Heo  16 Vincent Mok  15 Roland Veltkamp  58 Hakan Ay  13 Toshio Imaizumi  12 Beatriz Gomez-Anson  59 Kui Kai Lau  9 Eric Jouvent  7 Peter M Rothwell  6 Kazunori Toyoda  5 Hee-Joon Bae  3 Joan Marti-Fabregas  11 David J Werring  60 Microbleeds International Collaborative Network
Collaborators, Affiliations

Cerebral microbleeds and stroke risk after ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack: a pooled analysis of individual patient data from cohort studies

Duncan Wilson et al. Lancet Neurol. 2019 Jul.

Erratum in

  • Correction to Lancet Neurol 2019; 18: 653-65.
    [No authors listed] [No authors listed] Lancet Neurol. 2019 Sep;18(9):e8. doi: 10.1016/S1474-4422(19)30276-5. Epub 2019 Jul 12. Lancet Neurol. 2019. PMID: 31307817 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
  • Correction to Lancet Neurol 2019; 18: 653-65.
    [No authors listed] [No authors listed] Lancet Neurol. 2020 Feb;19(2):e2. doi: 10.1016/S1474-4422(19)30478-8. Epub 2020 Jan 3. Lancet Neurol. 2020. PMID: 31911029 No abstract available.

Abstract

Background: Cerebral microbleeds are a neuroimaging biomarker of stroke risk. A crucial clinical question is whether cerebral microbleeds indicate patients with recent ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack in whom the rate of future intracranial haemorrhage is likely to exceed that of recurrent ischaemic stroke when treated with antithrombotic drugs. We therefore aimed to establish whether a large burden of cerebral microbleeds or particular anatomical patterns of cerebral microbleeds can identify ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack patients at higher absolute risk of intracranial haemorrhage than ischaemic stroke.

Methods: We did a pooled analysis of individual patient data from cohort studies in adults with recent ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack. Cohorts were eligible for inclusion if they prospectively recruited adult participants with ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack; included at least 50 participants; collected data on stroke events over at least 3 months follow-up; used an appropriate MRI sequence that is sensitive to magnetic susceptibility; and documented the number and anatomical distribution of cerebral microbleeds reliably using consensus criteria and validated scales. Our prespecified primary outcomes were a composite of any symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage or ischaemic stroke, symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage, and symptomatic ischaemic stroke. We registered this study with the PROSPERO international prospective register of systematic reviews, number CRD42016036602.

Findings: Between Jan 1, 1996, and Dec 1, 2018, we identified 344 studies. After exclusions for ineligibility or declined requests for inclusion, 20 322 patients from 38 cohorts (over 35 225 patient-years of follow-up; median 1·34 years [IQR 0·19-2·44]) were included in our analyses. The adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] comparing patients with cerebral microbleeds to those without was 1·35 (95% CI 1·20-1·50) for the composite outcome of intracranial haemorrhage and ischaemic stroke; 2·45 (1·82-3·29) for intracranial haemorrhage and 1·23 (1·08-1·40) for ischaemic stroke. The aHR increased with increasing cerebral microbleed burden for intracranial haemorrhage but this effect was less marked for ischaemic stroke (for five or more cerebral microbleeds, aHR 4·55 [95% CI 3·08-6·72] for intracranial haemorrhage vs 1·47 [1·19-1·80] for ischaemic stroke; for ten or more cerebral microbleeds, aHR 5·52 [3·36-9·05] vs 1·43 [1·07-1·91]; and for ≥20 cerebral microbleeds, aHR 8·61 [4·69-15·81] vs 1·86 [1·23-1·82]). However, irrespective of cerebral microbleed anatomical distribution or burden, the rate of ischaemic stroke exceeded that of intracranial haemorrhage (for ten or more cerebral microbleeds, 64 ischaemic strokes [95% CI 48-84] per 1000 patient-years vs 27 intracranial haemorrhages [17-41] per 1000 patient-years; and for ≥20 cerebral microbleeds, 73 ischaemic strokes [46-108] per 1000 patient-years vs 39 intracranial haemorrhages [21-67] per 1000 patient-years).

Interpretation: In patients with recent ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack, cerebral microbleeds are associated with a greater relative hazard (aHR) for subsequent intracranial haemorrhage than for ischaemic stroke, but the absolute risk of ischaemic stroke is higher than that of intracranial haemorrhage, regardless of cerebral microbleed presence, antomical distribution, or burden.

Funding: British Heart Foundation and UK Stroke Association.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Study selection profile
Figure 2
Figure 2
Kaplan-Meier estimates for the primary outcomes in all patients (n=20 322)

Comment in

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