Receipt of cardiac screening does not influence 1-year post-cerebrovascular event mortality.

Neurol Clin Pract

Neurology Service (JJS), Clinical Epidemiology Research Center (CERC) (JJS, JC), and Medical Service (JC, FJ), VA Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven; Department of Neurology (JJS), Center for Neuroepidemiological and Clinical Research (JJS), and Department of Internal Medicine (JJS, JC, JF, FJ), Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT; VA Health Services Research and Development (HSR&D) Center for Health Information and Communication (CHIC) (FB, LJM, JF, LSW, DMB) and the HSR&D Stroke Quality Enhancement Research Initiative (QUERI) (FB, LJM, JF, LSW, DMB), Richard L. Roudebush VA Medical Center, Indianapolis; Departments of Biostatistics (FB, ZY), Internal Medicine (LJM, DMB), and Neurology (LSW, DMB), Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis; Department of Neurology (EMC), VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System and David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles; College of Health and Human Services (GA), Purdue University School of Nursing; Department of Pharmacy Practice (AJZ), Purdue University College of Pharmacy, West Lafayette, IN; Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics (MJR), Michigan State University, East Lansing; and Regenstrief Institute (LSW, DMB), Indianapolis, IN.

Published: June 2018

Background: American Heart Association/American Stroke Association expert consensus guidelines recommend consideration of cardiac stress testing to screen for occult coronary heart disease (CHD) among patients with ischemic stroke/TIA who have a high-risk Framingham Cardiac Risk Score (FCRS). Whether this guideline is being implemented in routine clinical practice, and the association of its implementation with mortality, is less clear.

Methods: Study participants were Veterans with stroke/TIA (n = 11,306) during fiscal year 2011 who presented to a VA Emergency Department or who were admitted. Patients were excluded (n = 6,915) based on prior CHD/angina/chest pain history, receipt of cardiac stress testing within 18 months prior to cerebrovascular event, death within 90 days of discharge, discharge to hospice, transfer to a non-VA acute care facility, or missing/unknown race. FCRS ≥20% was classified as high risk for CHD. ICD-9 and Common Procedural Terminology codes were used to identify receipt of any cardiac stress testing.

Results: Among 4,391 eligible patients, 62.8% (n = 2,759) had FCRS ≥20%. Cardiac stress testing was performed infrequently and in similar proportion among high-risk (4.5% [123/2,759]) vs low/intermediate-risk (4.4% [72/1,632]) patients (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 0.77, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.54-1.10). Receipt of stress testing was not associated with reduced 1-year mortality (aOR 0.59, CI 0.26-1.30).

Conclusions: In this observational cohort study of patients with cerebrovascular disease, cardiac screening was relatively uncommon and was not associated with 1-year mortality. Additional work is needed to understand the utility of CHD screening among high-risk patients with cerebrovascular disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6075977PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1212/CPJ.0000000000000465DOI Listing

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