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Secondary prevention after ischaemic stroke: the ASPIRE-S study..pdf (473.08 kB)

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

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-03-16, 16:31 authored by Linda BrewerLinda Brewer, Lisa MellonLisa Mellon, Patricia Hall, Eamon Dolan, Frances HorganFrances Horgan, Emer Shelley, Anne HickeyAnne Hickey, David WilliamsDavid 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

History

Comments

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

PubMed ID

26492943

Department/Unit

  • Beaumont Hospital
  • Health Psychology
  • Medicine
  • Public Health and Epidemiology
  • School of Physiotherapy