Outcome of intracerebral hemorrhage associated with different oral anticoagulants

Duncan Wilson(Heidelberg University), David Seiffge(Heidelberg University), Christopher Traenka(Heidelberg University), Ghazala Basir(Heidelberg University), Jan Purrucker(Heidelberg University), Timolaos Rizos(Heidelberg University), Oluwaseun A. Sobowale(Heidelberg University), Hanne Sallinen(Heidelberg University), Shin‐Joe Yeh(Heidelberg University), Teddy Y. Wu(Heidelberg University), Marc Ferrigno(Heidelberg University), Rik Houben(Heidelberg University), Floris H.B.M. Schreuder(Heidelberg University), Luke A. Perry(Heidelberg University), Jun Tanaka(Heidelberg University), Marion Boulanger(Heidelberg University), Rustam Al‐Shahi Salman(Heidelberg University), Hans Rolf Jäger(Heidelberg University), Gareth Ambler(Heidelberg University), Clare Shakeshaft(Heidelberg University), Yusuke Yakushiji(Heidelberg University), Philip Choi(Heidelberg University), Julie Staals(Heidelberg University), Charlotte Cordonnier(Heidelberg University), Jiann‐Shing Jeng(Heidelberg University), Roland Veltkamp(Heidelberg University), Dar Dowlatshahi(Heidelberg University), Stefan T. Engelter(Heidelberg University), Adrian Parry‐Jones(Heidelberg University), Atte Meretoja(Heidelberg University), David J. Werring(Heidelberg University), And the CROMIS-2 collaborators, CROMIS-2 collaborators, Louise Shaw, Jane Sword, Azlisham Mohd, Pankaj Sharma, Deborah F. Kelly, Frances Harrington, Nikola Sprigg, Marc Randall, Matthew Smith, Karim Mahawish, Abduelbaset Elmarim, Bernard Esisi, Claire Cullen, Arumug Nallasivam, Christopher Price, Adrian Barry, Christine Roffe, John Coyle, Ahamad Hassan, Caroline Lovelock, Jonathan Birns, David Cohen, Lakshmanan Sekaran, Adrian Parry‐Jones(Heidelberg University), Anthea Parry, David Hargroves, Harald Proschel, Prabel Datta, Khaled Darawil, Aravindakshan Manoj, Mathew Burn, Chris Patterson, Elio Giallombardo, Nigel Smyth, Syed Mansoor, Ijaz Anwar, Rachel Marsh, Sissi Ispoglou, Dinesh Chadha, Mathuri Prabhakaran, Sanjeevikumar Meenakishundaram, Janice O’Connell, Jon Scott, Vinodh Krishnamurthy, Prasanna Aghoram, Michael McCormick, Paul O’Mahony, Martin Cooper, Lillian Choy, Peter Wilkinson, Simon Leach, Sarah Caine, Ilse Burger, Gunaratam Gunathilagan, Paul Guyler, Hedley Emsley, Michelle Davis, Dulka Manawadu, Kath Pasco, Maam Mamun, Robert Luder, Mahmud Sajid, Ijaz Anwar, James Okwera, Julie Staals(Heidelberg University), Elizabeth A. Warburton, Kari Saastamoinen, Timothy J. England, Janet Putterill, Enrico Flossman, Mick Power, Krishna Dani, David Mangion, John Corrigan, Appu Suman, John Corrigan, Enas Lawrence, Djamil Vahidassr
Neurology
April 6, 2017
Cited by 152Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

<h3>Objective:</h3> In an international collaborative multicenter pooled analysis, we compared mortality, functional outcome, intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) volume, and hematoma expansion (HE) between non–vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulation–related ICH (NOAC-ICH) and vitamin K antagonist–associated ICH (VKA-ICH). <h3>Methods:</h3> We compared all-cause mortality within 90 days for NOAC-ICH and VKA-ICH using a Cox proportional hazards model adjusted for age; sex; baseline Glasgow Coma Scale score, ICH location, and log volume; intraventricular hemorrhage volume; and intracranial surgery. We addressed heterogeneity using a shared frailty term. Good functional outcome was defined as discharge modified Rankin Scale score ≤2 and investigated in multivariable logistic regression. ICH volume was measured by ABC/2 or a semiautomated planimetric method. HE was defined as an ICH volume increase &gt;33% or &gt;6 mL from baseline within 72 hours. <h3>Results:</h3> We included 500 patients (97 NOAC-ICH and 403 VKA-ICH). Median baseline ICH volume was 14.4 mL (interquartile range [IQR] 3.6–38.4) for NOAC-ICH vs 10.6 mL (IQR 4.0–27.9) for VKA-ICH (<i>p</i> = 0.78). We did not find any difference between NOAC-ICH and VKA-ICH for all-cause mortality within 90 days (33% for NOAC-ICH vs 31% for VKA-ICH [<i>p</i> = 0.64]; adjusted Cox hazard ratio (for NOAC-ICH vs VKA-ICH) 0.93 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.52–1.64] [<i>p</i> = 0.79]), the rate of HE (NOAC-ICH n = 29/48 [40%] vs VKA-ICH n = 93/140 [34%] [<i>p</i> = 0.45]), or functional outcome at hospital discharge (NOAC-ICH vs VKA-ICH odds ratio 0.47; 95% CI 0.18–1.19 [<i>p</i> = 0.11]). <h3>Conclusions:</h3> In our international collaborative multicenter pooled analysis, baseline ICH volume, hematoma expansion, 90-day mortality, and functional outcome were similar following NOAC-ICH and VKA-ICH.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis