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White Matter Hyperintensity Volume and Poststroke Cognition: An Individual Patient Data Pooled Analysis of 9 Ischemic Stroke Cohort Studies

Cited 7 time in Web of Science Cited 6 time in Scopus
Authors

de Kort, Floor A S; Coenen, Mirthe; Weaver, Nick A.; Kuijf, Hugo J.; Aben, Hugo P.; Bae, Hee-Joon; Bordet, Régis; Cammà, Guido; Chen, Christopher P L H; Dewenter, Anna; Duering, Marco; Fang, Rong; van der Giessen, Ruben S.; Hamilton, Olivia K L; Hilal, Saima; Huenges Wajer, Irene M C; Kan, Cheuk Ni; Kim, Jonguk; Kim, Beom Joon; Köhler, Sebastian; de Kort, Paul L M; Koudstaal, Peter J.; Lim, Jae-Sung; Lopes, Renaud; Mok, Vincent C T; Staals, Julie; Venketasubramanian, Narayanaswamy; Verhagen, Charlotte M.; Verhey, Frans R J; Wardlaw, Joanna M.; Xu, Xin; Yu, Kyung-Ho; Biesbroek, J Matthijs; Biessels, Geert Jan

Issue Date
2023-12
Publisher
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Ltd.
Citation
Stroke, Vol.54 No.12, pp.3021-3029
Abstract
BACKGROUND: White matter hyperintensities (WMH) are associated with cognitive dysfunction after ischemic stroke. Yet, uncertainty remains about affected domains, the role of other preexisting brain injury, and infarct types in the relation between WMH burden and poststroke cognition. We aimed to disentangle these factors in a large sample of patients with ischemic stroke from different cohorts. METHODS: We pooled and harmonized individual patient data (n=1568) from 9 cohorts, through the Meta VCI Map consortium (www.metavcimap.org). Included cohorts comprised patients with available magnetic resonance imaging and multidomain cognitive assessment <15 months poststroke. In this individual patient data meta-analysis, linear mixed models were used to determine the association between WMH volume and domain-specific cognitive functioning (Z scores; attention and executive functioning, processing speed, language and verbal memory) for the total sample and stratified by infarct type. Preexisting brain injury was accounted for in the multivariable models and all analyses were corrected for the study site as a random effect. RESULTS: In the total sample (67 years [SD, 11.5], 40% female), we found a dose-dependent inverse relationship between WMH volume and poststroke cognitive functioning across all 4 cognitive domains (coefficients ranging from -0.09 [SE, 0.04, P=0.01] for verbal memory to -0.19 [SE, 0.03, P<0.001] for attention and executive functioning). This relation was independent of acute infarct volume and the presence of lacunes and old infarcts. In stratified analyses, the relation between WMH volume and domain-specific functioning was also largely independent of infarct type. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with ischemic stroke, increasing WMH volume is independently associated with worse cognitive functioning across all major domains, regardless of old ischemic lesions and infarct type.
ISSN
0039-2499
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/205161
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.123.044297
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  • College of Medicine
  • Department of Medicine
Research Area 뇌경색, 뇌졸중, 혈관성 인지장애 및 치매

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