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Stroke. 2006;37:2342-2347
Published online before print August 3, 2006, doi: 10.1161/01.STR.0000236058.57880.03
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(Stroke. 2006;37:2342.)
© 2006 American Heart Association, Inc.


Original Contributions

Basilar Artery Diameter and 5-Year Mortality in Patients With Stroke

Fernando Pico, MD; Julien Labreuche, BS; Isabelle Gourfinkel-An, MD; Pierre Amarenco, MD on behalf of the GENIC Investigators*

From the Department of Neurology (F.P.), Mignot Versailles Hospital, Versailles; the Department of Neurology and Stroke Centre (J.B., P.A.), Bichat University Hospital, Denis Diderot University and Medical School-Paris; and the Department of Neurology (I.A.), Sainte-Anne Hospital, René Descarte University, Paris, France.

Correspondence to Prof Pierre Amarenco, Department of Neurology and Stroke Centre, Bichat University Hospital, 46 rue Henri Huchard, 75018 Paris, France. E-mail pierre.amarenco{at}bch.aphp.fr

Background and Purpose— Few and conflicting data exist on the case fatality rate in stroke patients with basilar artery dolichoectasia. We analyzed basilar artery characteristics (diameter, height of bifurcation, transverse position) and 5-year mortality (all-cause, nonstroke vascular, and stroke) in patients with brain infarction.

Methods— The basilar artery diameter was measured with a 16-diopter lens in 466 consecutively recruited patients with brain infarction confirmed by magnetic resonance imaging. The height of the bifurcation and the transverse position of the basilar artery were assessed on semiquantitative scales. Patients were followed up for a median of 5.3 years (range, 1.5 to 6.6) and were classified as having had stroke, nonstroke vascular, and nonvascular death according to the French national registry of death certificates.

Results— Of the 157 deaths, 88 were vascular (including 54 stroke deaths). Basilar artery diameter was associated with an increased 5-year stroke mortality rate but not with all-cause or nonstroke vascular mortality. The adjusted hazard ratio (HR) of stroke mortality per 1-mm increase in basilar artery diameter was 1.23 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.07 to 1.41). A higher risk of stroke death was associated with basilar artery diameter at the 95th percentile (diameter >4.3 mm; adjusted HR 3.69; 95% CI, 1.63 to 8.38) and the height of bifurcation (adjusted HR for score >1, 2.08; 95% CI, 0.93 to 4.68) but not with transverse position.

Conclusions— Basilar artery diameter was independently associated with cerebrovascular mortality. A diameter >4.3 mm may be a marker for a high risk of fatal stroke.


Key Words: basilar artery • mortality • stroke