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Secondary prevention after ischaemic stroke: the ASPIRE-S study.

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Version 2 2022-03-16, 16:31
Version 1 2019-11-22, 15:42
journal contribution
posted on 2019-11-22, 15:42 authored by Linda Brewer, Lisa Mellon, Patricia Hall, Eamon Dolan, Frances Horgan, Emer Shelley, Anne Hickey, David Williams, ASPIRE-S Study Group

BACKGROUND: Survivors of ischaemic stroke (IS) are at high-risk for future vascular events. Comprehensive information on the adequacy of secondary prevention after IS is lacking despite the knowledge that appropriate secondary prevention improves long-term patient outcomes. ASPIRE-S (Action on Secondary Prevention Interventions and Rehabilitation in Stroke) aimed to prospectively assess secondary prevention in patients 6 months following IS.

METHODS: Consenting patients admitted with IS to three Dublin hospitals were recruited over 1 year, from October 2011. At 6 months post IS a comprehensive assessment was completed, modelled on the EUROASPIRE protocol for evaluation of the adequacy of secondary prevention in post-discharge cardiac patients. This assessment included measurements of blood pressure, body mass index and fasting lipid and glucose profiles. Secondary preventive medications and smoking status were also documented.

RESULTS: Three hundred two patients (58 % male) participated, of whom 256 (85 %) were followed-up at 6 months. Mean age was 69 years (range 22-95). At follow-up, 68 % of patients had a BMI >25 kg/m(2) and 16.4 % were still smoking. Almost two-thirds (63.4 %) had a blood pressure >140/90 and 23 % had low-density-lipoprotein >2.5 mmol/L. 28 % of diabetic patients had HbA1c ≥7 %. Ninety seven percent of patients were on anti-platelet and/or anticoagulant therapy. Of those with atrial fibrillation, 82 % were anti-coagulated (mean INR of 2.4). Ninety-five percent were on lipid-lowering therapy and three-quarters were on anti-hypertensive therapy.

CONCLUSION: This prospective multi-centre survey of IS patients demonstrated a high prevalence of remaining modifiable risk factors at 6 months post stroke, despite the widespread prescription of secondary preventive medications. There is scope to improve preventive measures after IS (in particular blood pressure) by incorporating evidence-based guidelines into quality assurance cycles in stroke care.

Funding

Irish Health Research Board

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The original article is available from www.biomedcentral.com

Published Citation

Brewer L, Mellon L, Hall P, Dolan E, Horgan F, Shelley E, Hickey A, Williams D; ASPIRE-S Study Group. Secondary prevention after ischaemic stroke: the ASPIRE-S study. BMC Neurology. 2015 Oct 23;15(1):216

Publication Date

2015-10-23

Publisher

BioMed Central

PubMed ID

26492943

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