Cirrhosis associated with increased risk of stroke

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Cirrhosis was associated with increased risk of stroke, especially haemorrhagic, in a study that included a representative sample of more than 1.6 million Medicare beneficiaries, according to an article published by JAMA Neurology.

Neal S Parikh of Weill Cornell Medicine and New York-Presbyterian Hospital, New York City, USA, and coauthors used inpatient and outpatient Medicare claims data from 2008 through 2014 for a random sample of Medicare beneficiaries older than 66.

Of more than 1.6 million Medicare beneficiaries, 15,586 patients (1%) had cirrhosis, and during an average of about four years of follow-up, 77,268 patients were hospitalised with a stroke. The incidence of stroke was 2.17% per year in patients with cirrhosis and 1.11% per year in patients without cirrhosis. Patients with cirrhosis had a higher risk of stroke, especially haemorrhagic, according to the results.

The authors acknowledge multiple possible explanations for the association between cirrhosis and increased risk of stroke, including mixed coagulopathy, that patients’ underlying vascular risk factors may be heightened by cirrhosis, and that the underlying causes of cirrhosis (alcohol abuse, hepatitis C infection and metabolic disease) also may contribute to stroke risk. The study notes limitations, including ascertaining vascular risk factors may be incomplete.

“In a nationally representative sample of elderly patients with vascular risk factors, cirrhosis was associated with an increased risk of stroke, particularly haemorrhagic stroke. Additional investigation into the epidemiology and pathophysiology of this association may yield opportunities for stroke risk reduction and prevention,” the article concludes.


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