Cerebral microbleeds and intracranial haemorrhage risk in patients anticoagulated for atrial fibrillation after acute ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack (CROMIS-2): a multicentre observational cohort study

Duncan Wilson(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Gareth Ambler(University College London), Clare Shakeshaft(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Martin M. Brown(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Andreas Charidimou(Harvard University), Rustam Al‐Shahi Salman(University of Edinburgh), Gregory Y.H. Lip(University of Birmingham), Hannah Cohen(University College London), Gargi Banerjee(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Henry Houlden(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Mark White(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Tarek Yousry(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Kirsty Harkness(Royal Hallamshire Hospital), Enrico Floßmann(Royal Berkshire Hospital), Nigel Smyth(Royal Hampshire County Hospital), Louise Shaw(Royal United Hospital), Elizabeth A. Warburton(Addenbrooke's Hospital), Keith W. Muir(Queen Elizabeth University Hospital), Hans Rolf Jäger(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), David J. Werring(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), John Aeron‐Thomas, Prasanna Aghoram, Elaine Amis, Peter Anderton, Sreeman Andole, Ijaz Anwar, John Bamford, Azra Banaras, Aian Barry, Ruth Bellfied, Aienne Benford, Ajay Bhalla, Maneesh Bhargava, Biju Bhaskaran, Neelima Bhupathiraju, Jonathan Birns, Aian Blight, Angie Bowring, Ellen Brown(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), David Bruce(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Amanda Buck, Kerry Bunworth, Ilse Burger, Laura Burgess, Mathew Burn, Evelyn Burssens, Mauian Burton(Addenbrooke's Hospital), Nicola Butler, Denise Button, Michael D. Carpenter, Dinesh Chadha, Kausik Chatterjee, Lillian Choy, David Cohen(University College London), Lynne Connell, Martin Cooper(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), John Corrigan, Donna Cotterill, Gillian Courtauld, Susan E. Crawford, Claire Cullen, Krishna Dani, Amelia Daniel, Prabel Datta, Michelle Davis, Nicola C. Day, Mandy Doherty, Catherine Douglas, Karen Dunne, Collette Edwards, Charlotte Eglinton, Abduelbaset Elmarimi, Hedley Emsley, Timothy J. England, Daniel Epstein, Renuka Erande, Bernard Esisi, Rachel Evans, Pamela Farren, Pauline Fitzell, Glyn Fletcher, Rachel Gallifent, Rachel Gascoyne, Elio Giallombardo, Bindu Gregary, Gunaratam Gunathilagan, Paul Guyler, Brigid Hairsine, Michael Haley, Anne Hardwick, David Hargroves(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Frances Harrington, Amanda Hedstrom, Clare Holmes(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Senussi Hussein, Tanya Ingram, Sissi Ispoglou, Liz Iveson(Addenbrooke's Hospital), Venetia Vettimootal Johnson, Frances Justin, Shahid A Kausar, Karen Kee, Michael Keeling, Shagufta Khan, Agnieszka Kieliszkowska, Hayley Kingwell, Vinodh Krishnamurthy, Sagal Kullane, Balakrishna Kumar, Simon Leach, S Leason, Paula Lopez, Robert Luder, B. Madigan, Stuart Maguire, Holly Maguire, Karim Mahawish, Linetty Makawa, Maam Mamun, Dulka Manawadu, David Mangion(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Aravindakshan Manoj, Syed Mansoor, Tracy Marsden, Rachel Marsh, Sheila Mashate, Michael McCormick, Clare McGolick(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Madeleine McKee, Emma McKenzie, Sanjeevikumar Meenakishundaram, Zoe Mellor, Amulya Misra, Amit Mistri, Azlisham Mohd Nor, Mushiya Mpelembue, Peter Murphy, Arumug Nallasivam, Ann Needle(Royal Berkshire Hospital), Vinh Nguyen, Janice O’Connell, Paul O’Mahony, James Okwera, Chukwuka Orefo, Peter Owusu‐Agyei, Anthea Parry, Adrian Parry‐Jones, Kath Pasco, Chris Patterson, Cassilda Peixoto, Jane Perez, Nicola Persad, Mia Porteous, Mick Power, Christopher Price, Harald Proschel, Shuja Punekar, Janet Putterill, Marc Randall, Ozlem Redjep, Habib ur Rehman, Emma Richards, V.E. Riddell, Christine Roffe, Gill Rogers, Anthony Rudd, Kari Saastamoinen, Mahmud Sajid, Banher Sandhu, Christine Schofield, Jon Scott, Lakshmanan Sekaran, Pankaj Sharma, Jagdish C. Sharma, Simon Sharpe, Matthew Smith, Anew Smith, Nikola Sprigg, Julie Staals, Amy Steele, G Storey, Kelley Storey, Santhosh Subramonian, Jane Sword, Grainne Tallon, Garryck Tan, Margaret Tate, Jennifer Teke, Natalie Temple, Teresa Thompson, Sharon Tysoe, Djamil Vahidassr, Anouk van der Kwaak, Roland Veltkamp, Deborah Walstow, C Watchurst, Fran Watson, Dean Waugh, Peter Wilkinson, David B. Wilson(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Sarah Wilson-Owen, Belinda Wroath, Inez Wynter, Emma Young
The Lancet Neurology
May 16, 2018
Cited by 256Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cerebral microbleeds are a potential neuroimaging biomarker of cerebral small vessel diseases that are prone to intracranial bleeding. We aimed to determine whether presence of cerebral microbleeds can identify patients at high risk of symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage when anticoagulated for atrial fibrillation after recent ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack. METHODS: Our observational, multicentre, prospective inception cohort study recruited adults aged 18 years or older from 79 hospitals in the UK and one in the Netherlands with atrial fibrillation and recent acute ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack, treated with a vitamin K antagonist or direct oral anticoagulant, and followed up for 24 months using general practitioner and patient postal questionnaires, telephone interviews, hospital visits, and National Health Service digital data on hospital admissions or death. We excluded patients if they could not undergo MRI, had a definite contraindication to anticoagulation, or had previously received therapeutic anticoagulation. The primary outcome was symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage occurring at any time before the final follow-up at 24 months. The log-rank test was used to compare rates of intracranial haemorrhage between those with and without cerebral microbleeds. We developed two prediction models using Cox regression: first, including all predictors associated with intracranial haemorrhage at the 20% level in univariable analysis; and second, including cerebral microbleed presence and HAS-BLED score. We then compared these with the HAS-BLED score alone. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02513316. FINDINGS: Between Aug 4, 2011, and July 31, 2015, we recruited 1490 participants of whom follow-up data were available for 1447 (97%), over a mean period of 850 days (SD 373; 3366 patient-years). The symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage rate in patients with cerebral microbleeds was 9·8 per 1000 patient-years (95% CI 4·0-20·3) compared with 2·6 per 1000 patient-years (95% CI 1·1-5·4) in those without cerebral microbleeds (adjusted hazard ratio 3·67, 95% CI 1·27-10·60). Compared with the HAS-BLED score alone (C-index 0·41, 95% CI 0·29-0·53), models including cerebral microbleeds and HAS-BLED (0·66, 0·53-0·80) and cerebral microbleeds, diabetes, anticoagulant type, and HAS-BLED (0·74, 0·60-0·88) predicted symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage significantly better (difference in C-index 0·25, 95% CI 0·07-0·43, p=0·0065; and 0·33, 0·14-0·51, p=0·00059, respectively). INTERPRETATION: In patients with atrial fibrillation anticoagulated after recent ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack, cerebral microbleed presence is independently associated with symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage risk and could be used to inform anticoagulation decisions. Large-scale collaborative observational cohort analyses are needed to refine and validate intracranial haemorrhage risk scores incorporating cerebral microbleeds to identify patients at risk of net harm from oral anticoagulation. FUNDING: The Stroke Association and the British Heart Foundation.


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