Ischaemic stroke in South Asians: The BRAINS study

Taylor Aurelius(Royal Holloway University of London), Ankita Maheshwari(Rajendra Institute of Medical Sciences), Gie Ken‐Dror(Royal Holloway University of London), Sapna Sharma(Royal Holloway University of London), Sageet Amlani(Barts Health NHS Trust), Gunaratnam Gunathilagan(Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother Hospital), David Cohen(Northwick Park Hospital), Chakravarthi Rajkumar(Brighton and Sussex Medical School), Stuart Maguire(Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Sissi Ispoglou(Birmingham City Hospital), Ibrahim Balogun(William Harvey Hospital), Anthea Parry(Hillingdon Hospital), Lakshmanan Sekaran(Luton and Dunstable Hospital), Hafiz Syed(Newham University Hospital), Enas Lawrence(Croydon University Hospital), Ravneeta Singh(West Middlesex University Hospital), Ahamad Hassan(Leeds General Infirmary), Chris Wharton(New Cross Hospital), Khalid Javaid(Walsall Manor Hospital), Neetish Goorah(Royal Blackburn Teaching Hospital), Peter Carr(Heartlands Hospital), Eman Abdus Sami(Airedale General Hospital), Shri Ram Sharma(Royal Holloway University of London), Padmavathy N. Sylaja(Sree Chitra Thirunal Institute for Medical Sciences and Technology), Kameshwar Prasad(Rajendra Institute of Medical Sciences), Pankaj Sharma(Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust), the BRAINS collaborators
European Journal of Neurology
October 19, 2022
Cited by 10Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Background and purpose Studies on stroke in South Asian populations are sparse. The aim of this study was to compare differences in age of onset of ischaemic stroke in South Asian patients living in the United Kingdom and South Asian patients living in India versus White British stroke patients. Methods We studied the UK and Indian arms of the ongoing BRAINS study, an international prospective hospital‐based study of South Asian stroke patients. The BRAINS study includes 4038 South Asian and White British patients with first‐ever ischaemic stroke, recruited from sites in the United Kingdom and India. Results Of the included patients, 1126 were South Asians living in India (ISA), while 1176 were British South Asian (BSA) and 1736 were White British (WB) UK residents. Patients in the ISA and BSA groups experienced stroke 19.5 years and 7.2 years earlier than their WB counterparts, respectively (mean [interquartile range] age: BSA 64.3 [22] years vs. ISA 52.0 [18] years vs. WB 71.5 [19] years; p < 0.001). Patients in the BSA group had higher rates of hypertension, diabetes mellitus and hypercholesterolaemia than those in the ISA and WB groups. After adjustment for traditional stroke risk factors, an earlier age of stroke onset of 18.9 years ( p < 0.001) and 8.9 years ( p < 0.001) was still observed in the ISA and BSA groups, respectively. In multivariable stepwise linear regression analysis, ethnicity accounted for 24.7% of the variance in early age onset. Conclusion Patients in the BSA and ISA groups experienced ischaemic stroke approximately 9 and 19 years earlier, respectively, than their WB counterparts. Ethnicity is an independent predictor of early age of stroke onset. Our study has considerable implications for public health policymakers in countries with sizable South Asian populations.


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