医学
冲程(发动机)
流行病学
入射(几何)
人口
病死率
人口学
脑出血
蛛网膜下腔出血
儿科
老年学
外科
内科学
环境卫生
机械工程
物理
社会学
光学
工程类
作者
Tracy E. Madsen,Lili Ding,Jane Khoury,Mary Haverbusch,Daniel Woo,Simona Ferioli,Felipe De Los Rios La Rosa,Sharyl Martini,Opeolu Adeoye,Pooja Khatri,Matthew L. Flaherty,Jason Mackey,Eva Mistry,Stacie L Demel,Elisheva Coleman,Adam Jasne,Sabreena Slavin,Kyle B Walsh,Michael Star,Joseph P. Broderick,Brett M. Kissela,Dawn Kleindorfer
出处
期刊:Neurology
[Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer)]
日期:2024-02-13
卷期号:102 (3)
标识
DOI:10.1212/wnl.0000000000208077
摘要
Understanding the current status of and temporal trends of stroke epidemiology by age, race, and stroke subtype is critical to evaluate past prevention efforts and to plan future interventions to eliminate existing inequities. We investigated trends in stroke incidence and case fatality over a 22-year time period.In this population-based stroke surveillance study, all cases of stroke in acute care hospitals within a 5-county population of southern Ohio/northern Kentucky in adults aged ≥20 years were ascertained during a full year every 5 years from 1993 to 2015. Temporal trends in stroke epidemiology were evaluated by age, race (Black or White), and subtype (ischemic stroke [IS], intracranial hemorrhage [ICH], or subarachnoid hemorrhage [SAH]). Stroke incidence rates per 100,000 individuals from 1993 to 2015 were calculated using US Census data and age-standardized, race-standardized, and sex-standardized as appropriate. Thirty-day case fatality rates were also reported.Incidence rates for stroke of any type and IS decreased in the combined population and among White individuals (any type, per 100,000, 215 [95% CI 204-226] in 1993/4 to 170 [95% CI 161-179] in 2015, p = 0.015). Among Black individuals, incidence rates for stroke of any type decreased over the study period (per 100,000, 349 [95% CI 311-386] in 1993/4 to 311 [95% CI 282-340] in 2015, p = 0.015). Incidence of ICH was stable over time in the combined population and in race-specific subgroups, and SAH decreased in the combined groups and in White adults. Incidence rates among Black adults were higher than those of White adults in all time periods, and Black:White risk ratios were highest in adults in young and middle age groups. Case fatality rates were similar by race and by time period with the exception of SAH in which 30-day case fatality rates decreased in the combined population and White adults over time.Stroke incidence is decreasing over time in both Black and White adults, an encouraging trend in the burden of cerebrovascular disease in the US population. Unfortunately, however, Black:White disparities have not decreased over a 22-year period, especially among younger and middle-aged adults, suggesting the need for more effective interventions to eliminate inequities by race.