Hematoma growth and outcomes in intracerebral hemorrhage

Candice Delcourt, Yining Huang(Peking University), Hisatomi Arima(The George Institute for Global Health), John Chalmers(The George Institute for Global Health), Stephen M. Davis(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), Emma Heeley, Ji‐Guang Wang(Shanghai Institute of Hypertension), Mark Parsons, Guorong Liu, Craig S. Anderson(The George Institute for Global Health), John Chalmers(The George Institute for Global Health), Craig S. Anderson(The George Institute for Global Health), Yining Huang(Peking University First Hospital), Jiangfeng Wang(Shanghai Institute of Hypertension), Hisatomi Arima(The George Institute for Global Health), Philip M. Bath(University of Nottingham), Stephen M. Davis(The University of Melbourne), Jin‐Tae Kim(Asan Medical Center), Richard I. Lindley(The George Institute for Global Health), Bruce Neal(The George Institute for Global Health), Lewis B. Morgenstern(University of San Francisco), Stephen MacMahon(The George Institute for Global Health), Mark Woodward(The George Institute for Global Health), Christopher Bladin(Box Hill Hospital), Christian J. Lueck(Canberra Hospital), Christopher Levi(John Hunter Hospital), A.D. Corbett(Concord Repatriation General Hospital), Stephen M. Davis(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), David Blacker(Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital), B. Chambers, Jonathon Sturm(Gosford Hospital), Qiushan Tao(Kaiping Central Hospital), Yanping Li(Baotou Central Hospital), Jing‐fei Dong, L. Tai(Hebei Medical University), Jinli Zhang(PLA 306 Hospital), En Xu(Second Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University), Yali Cheng(Tianjin Medical University General Hospital), Shuo Wang(Shanghai First People's Hospital), Jia Liu(Hebei Medical University), Xuerui Tan(Pingliang People's Hospital), N. Wang(Fujian Medical University), Qiu‐Ting Dong(Shanghai Medical College of Fudan University), Chao Liu, Jian Sun(Second Military Medical University), Xin Sun(Shanghai Sixth People's Hospital), Mingguang He(Beijing Shijitan Hospital), Liyun Miao(Renji Hospital), Yifei Sun(Beijing Jishuitan Hospital), Sheng Ding(Second Military Medical University), W. Zhang(The Military General Hospital of Beijing PLA), Sheng Chen(Ruijin Hospital), Zhenguo Liu(XinHua Hospital), Xiaokun Qi(PLA Navy General Hospital), Yining Huang(Peking University), Ying Jiang(Jiangsu Province Hospital), J. FengJilin, Qing Di(Nanjing Brain Hospital), Wenbin Li(Shanghai Ninth People's Hospital), Xiaopeng Li, Dongsheng Fan(Peking University Third Hospital), Xianggang Gao(Peking University), Ka Sing Wong(Prince of Wales Hospital), K.H. Cho(Chonnam National University Hospital), Hee‐Joon Bae(Seoul National University Bundang Hospital), Byung‐Woo Yoon(Seoul National University Hospital), J.S. Kim(Asan Medical Center)
Neurology
June 29, 2012
Cited by 261

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Uncertainty exists over the size of potential beneficial effects of medical treatments targeting hematoma growth in intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). We report associations of hematoma growth parameters on clinical outcomes in the pilot phase, Intensive Blood Pressure Reduction in Acute Cerebral Hemorrhage Trial (INTERACT1) (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00226096). METHODS: In randomized patients with both baseline and 24-hour brain CT (n = 335), associations between measures of absolute and relative hematoma growth and 90-day poor outcomes of death and dependency (modified Rankin Scale score 3-5) were assessed in logistic regression models, with data reported as odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI). RESULTS: A total of 10.7 mL (1 SD) increase in hematoma volume over 24 hours was strongly associated with poor outcome (adjusted OR 1.72, 95% CI 1.19-2.49; p = 0.004). An association was also evident for relative growth (adjusted OR 1.67, 95% 1.22-2.27; p = 0.001 for 1 SD increase). The analyses were adjusted for age, sex, achieved systolic blood pressure, elevated NIH Stroke Scale score (≥ 14), hematoma location, baseline hematoma volume, intraventricular extension, antithrombotic therapy, baseline glucose, time from ICH to baseline CT scan, and time from baseline to repeat CT scan. A 1 mL increase in hematoma growth was associated with a 5% (95% CI 2%-9%) higher risk of death or dependency. CONCLUSION: Medical treatments, such as rapid intensive blood pressure lowering, could achieve ∼2-4 mL absolute attenuation of hematoma growth. There is hope that this could translate into modest but still clinically worthwhile (∼10%-20% better chance) outcome from ICH.


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