Inflammatory Biomarkers and Stroke Subtype: An Important New Frontier.

Neurology

From the Department of Neurology (S.C.), University of Maryland, Baltimore; and Department of Neurology & Stroke Center (G.M.D.M.), Kantonsspital St. Gallen, Switzerland.

Published: January 2024

Inflammation is an established pathway in the formation, growth, and rupture of atherosclerotic plaques. Inflammation is thus essential to the pathogenesis of coronary heart disease and some types of ischemic stroke. The benefit of anti-inflammatory therapies, such as colchicine and the anti-IL1β canakinumab, is proven in patients with coronary heart disease, yet it remains unproven for patients with ischemic stroke. Compared with coronary heart disease, the etiology of stroke is more heterogeneous. Besides arterio-arterial atherogenic embolism, possible etiologies are penetrator artery occlusion, cardioembolism, and other mechanisms. Finding a stroke etiology remains elusive in up to 30%-40% of patients despite a full evaluation. Understanding whether the stroke etiology modifies the association between inflammatory markers and recurrence risk is an important step to improve selection of patients for randomized trials on anti-inflammatory agents. IL-6 and high-sensitive CRP (hs-CRP) have been implicated in a higher recurrence risk after ischemic stroke by both an individual participant data meta-analysis and a Mendelian randomization study, but granular, in vivo results stratified by stroke etiology are lacking.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000208098DOI Listing

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