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(Stroke. 2005;36:830.)
© 2005 American Heart Association, Inc.
Original Contributions |
From the Stroke Prevention Research Unit, University Department of Clinical Neurology, Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford, UK.
Correspondence to Prof P.M. Rothwell, Stroke Prevention Research Unit, University Department of Clinical Neurology, Radcliffe Infirmary, Woodstock Rd, Oxford OX2 6HE, UK. E-mail peter.rothwell{at}clneuro.ox.ac.uk
| Abstract |
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Methods We studied FHxstroke and FHx of myocardial infarction (FHxMI) in TIA patients from 2 population-based incidence studies and 2 prospective consecutive hospital-referred series. We related the presence of FHx to baseline characteristics, clinical subtype, and IPs.
Results Results were similar in the 4 cohorts, and so data on all 783 patients were pooled. FHxstroke was less common than FHxMI (189 versus 254; P=0.0003). FHxstroke and FHxMI were strongly related to history of hypertension in the proband (odds ratio [OR], 1.78; 95% CI, 1.28 to 2.48; P=0.0008; and OR, 2.10, 95% CI, 1.55 to 2.85; P<0.0001, respectively). Highest recorded premorbid systolic and diastolic blood pressures (mm Hg) were significantly higher in cases with FHxstroke than those without and increased with the number of affected first-degree relatives (0 181/100; 1 185/104;
2 198/109; P=0.03). There was no association between FHxstroke and age, diabetes, smoking, plasma glucose, cholesterol, or territory of TIA, but FHxstroke was less common in patients with ocular TIA than in cases with cerebral TIA (OR, 0.53; 95% CI, 0.34 to 0.82; P=0.004), although the association was no longer significant after adjustment for hypertension.
Conclusions The strong association between hypertension and FHxstroke suggests that familial susceptibility to cerebral ischemia is attributable, at least partly, to familial predisposition to hypertension. This should be taken into account in studies of the genetics of ischemic stroke.
Key Words: blood pressure cerebral ischemia, transient genetics history
| Introduction |
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In the absence of detailed twin studies, family history (FHx) studies can provide useful data on the heritability of stroke.2,3 Several prospective cohort studies have been reported2,3 but have provided little detail on IPs. Case control studies are difficult to interpret because of recall bias, and few have taken account of the subtype of stroke, age of the proband or of the affected first-degree relative (FDR), the number of affected FDRs, and sibship size.2,3 An alternative approach is to do case-to-case studies (ie, to compare the characteristics of patients with versus without FHx). This methodology avoids recall bias inherent in case control comparisons because all patients have experienced a recent cerebrovascular event and can determine which characteristics of the proband (eg, age, subtype, IPs, etc) are associated with FHx. A study confined to transient ischemic attack (TIA) patients avoids other biases resulting from unavailability of data in stroke patients with dysphasia, intercurrent illness, or cognitive dysfunction, and is less liable to bias because of changes in measurements of IPs, such as blood pressure (BP), cholesterol, and glucose, caused by the acute event itself.
We investigated the relationships of FHx of stroke (FHxstroke) and FHx of myocardial infarction (FHxMI), including age of the proband, the FDRs affected, and the number of affected FDRs, with clinical characteristics and IPs in 2 population-based incidence studies and 2 prospective consecutive hospital-referred series of patients with a recent TIA.
| Methods |
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In all studies, a study neurologist assessed patients as soon as possible after notification and computed tomography brain imaging was obtained. A TIA was defined as an episode of sudden-onset focal neurological disturbance, presumed to be vascular in origin, with symptoms lasting <24 hours. Details of the presenting event, clinical characteristics, and medical history were recorded from the patient, relatives, family practitioner (FP), and hospital records.
Family History
FHx was collected using a semistructured (OCSP) or structured questionnaire (OXVASC and both hospital-based TIA series) separately for stroke and for myocardial infarction (MI) from the patients, their relatives, and their medical records. It was regarded as positive if
1 FDR was affected. All cohorts recorded whether father, mother, or siblings were affected. The number of affected FDRs and their relationship to the proband were recorded. Family trees and details of what age the relative was when affected and the overall number of siblings were collected in OXVASC and the second hospital-referred series. The assessment of the history of stroke in an FDR was based on the patients or relatives description. Histories of TIA, intracranial hemorrhage, or subarachnoid hemorrhage were excluded. The definition of MI in an FDR was also based on the clinical description and included sudden death. Previous work has shown that nonverified patient-reported FHx in FDRs is sometimes inaccurate but that the likelihood ratios for FHxstroke and FHxMI are 11.2 (95% CI, 9.2 to 13.6) and 8.6 (95% CI, 6.8 to 10.9), respectively, indicating good discriminatory power.17
Baseline Data
Detailed baseline data were recorded, including age, sex, systolic BP (SBP), and diastolic BP (DBP; measured at the initial interview). The highest-ever premorbid SBP and DBP and the most recent BP predating the TIA were obtained from FP records in both population-based studies. Information on the following medical conditions before the TIA was obtained from patients or their medical records: previous ischemic heart disease (IHD; angina or MI), hypertension (on medication), cardiac failure (on medication), diabetes mellitus (DM; on medication), and peripheral vascular disease. Patients were classified as current smokers if they were smoking at the time of assessments or had given up smoking <1 year previously. The following information was recorded about the presenting event: carotid versus vertebrobasilar territory, cerebral versus ocular only (if carotid territory), and duration of longest event. Nonfasting blood was sampled for packed-cell volume, platelet count, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), and for random total cholesterol, triglyceride, and plasma glucose.
Statistical Analysis
Heterogeneity of associations between studies was calculated with the
2 method. Where appropriate, data were pooled to increase statistical power. We allowed for possible differences between studies by adjusting or stratifying analyses by "study" where appropriate. We also calculated odds ratios (ORs) within individual studies and combined them by fixed-effects meta-analysis using the MantelHaenszel method. To study any differences in baseline characteristics between patients with and without FHx, we used the
2 test for categorical variables. If a cell contained an expected number of
5, we used a 2-tailed Fisher exact test. We used ANOVA for comparison of continuous variables. For any factor that showed an association with FHx, we performed a logistic regression analysis, adjusting for age, sex, study, and the presence of other vascular risk factors. All analyses were performed with SPSS version 12.0.1 (SPSS).
| Results |
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There were no significant differences between population-based and hospital-referred cohorts in the frequency of FHx or in which FDRs were affected (Table 1), nor in age, sex, or other risk factors. Furthermore, the age at which relatives were affected, as well as the total number of siblings, was similarly distributed in both cohorts (OXVASC; and second hospital-referred series) that collected these data. For the following analyses, we therefore report results from the pooled data of all 4 cohorts where appropriate. An FHxstroke was less common (189 patients; 24.1%) than an FHxMI (254 patients; 32.4%; P=0.0003). FHx of both MI and stroke was present in 67 (8.6%), whereas 376 (48.0%) had FHx of either stroke or MI. Thirty-five (4.5%) had >1 affected FDR with stroke, and 73 (9.3%) had multiple affected FDRs with MI. Age did not differ significantly between patients with and without FHxstroke or FHxMI.
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A total of 185 patients had an ocular TIA only, with no history of recent cerebral ischemia, and 437 patients had a recent cerebral carotid territory TIA. FHxstroke was less common in cases with an ocular TIA only than in cases with cerebral events (20.6% versus 32.8%; OR, 0.53; 95% CI, 0.34 to 0.82; P=0.004). However, this association was no longer significant after adjustment for history of hypertension and source study (OR, 0.66; 95% CI, 0.41 to 1.05; P=0.08), but was changed little by further adjustment for age, sex, DM, IHD, and smoking (OR, 0.67; 95% CI, 0.42 to 1.08; P=0.10). FHxstroke did not differ between patients with carotid or vertebrobasilar TIA or in relation to TIA duration. FHxMI showed no significant association with TIA territory (Table 2).
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Patients with FHxstroke were more likely to have a history of hypertension than those without (56.1% versus 41.2%; OR, 1.78; 95% CI, 1.28 to 2.48; P=0.0008; Table 3) with no significant heterogeneity between the cohorts (P=0.66; Figure). The association remained highly significant after multivariate adjustment for study, age, sex, DM, and smoking (OR, 1.66; 95% CI, 1.18 to 2.33; P=0.003). There was also a trend for higher mean SBP and DBP in patients with FHxstroke (Table 3), particularly in the 2 older studies, which were performed when antihypertensive treatment was less prevalent (mean SBP 167 versus 160; P=0.028; and mean DBP 90 versus 87; P=0.073) in patients with versus without FHxstroke. The most recent BP measurements predating the TIA and maximum-ever premorbid BPs were available in the 2 population-based cohorts (Table 3). Again, patients with FHxstroke had higher SBP and DBP, particularly for the highest-ever premorbid SBP (P=0.10) and DBP (P=0.05). The strength of the relationship between FHxstroke and highest-ever premorbid BP was related to the number of affected FDRs (mean BP: 0 181/100; 1 185/104;
2 198/109; Table 3; P=0.035 for SBP and P=0.027 for DBP). These trends remained significant (P=0.05) after adjusting for study, age, sex, DM, and smoking. FHxMI showed a similar association with history of hypertension (OR, 2.10; 95% CI, 1.55 to 2.85; P<0.0001), but the association with measured BP was not as strong (Table 3).
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FHxMI was strongly associated with a history of IHD in the proband (OR, 1.98; 95% CI, 1.39 to 2.83; P=0.0002). In contrast, there was no association with FHxstroke and IHD (OR, 0.97; 95% CI, 0.65 to 1.46; P=0.90). Neither FHx was associated with a history of peripheral vascular disease, cardiac failure, DM, atrial fibrillation, or current smoking after adjusting for source study (Table 2).
There was no association between FHxstroke or FHxMI and total cholesterol, mean glucose, packed-cell volume, platelets, or ESR. However, FHxMI was associated with higher mean triglyceride levels (1.90 versus 1.74 mmol/L; P=0.05). However, this association was no longer significant after multivariate adjustment for study, age, sex, DM, hypertension, and smoking. FHxstroke showed no association with triglyceride levels (Table 2).
| Discussion |
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The association between FHxstroke and hypertension is important because BP is the single most powerful risk factor for stroke19,20 and has a strong heritable component itself.21 The corresponding associations between FHxstroke and measured BP are likely to be underestimates of the true associations because of intraindividual variation in BP and consequent regression dilution of associations based on single measurements.22 The observed relationships will also have been weakened by treatment of hypertension, which would explain why the association between FHxstroke and BP was stronger for the highest-ever recorded premorbid measurement than for the most recent measurement. Hypertension was also associated with FHxMI, but measured levels of BP had a weaker correlation compared with FHxstroke. We have shown previously that FHxstroke but not FHxMI was linked with a history of hypertension in stroke patients.23 These associations between hypertension and FHxstroke could reflect familial clustering of hypertension attributable to either shared genetic or environmental factors.24
Virtually all IHD and many ischemic strokes are manifestations of atherosclerotic vascular disease and share common risk factors. This close relationship is further highlighted by the fact that even in our patients with TIA, FHxMI was more prevalent than FHxstroke. However, there were important differences in the prevalence of IPs between TIA patients with FHxMI versus those with FHxstroke. Only FHxMI was significantly associated with a previous diagnosis of IHD and with higher mean triglyceride levels. Neither FHx correlated with a previous diagnosis of DM or serum glucose. This is consistent with previous studies in stroke patients.2
Although patients with ocular TIA(s) only were just as likely as patients with cerebral TIAs to have FHxMI, indicating a possible heritability of large vessel atherosclerosis, they were less likely to have FHxstroke. This suggests perhaps that genetic factors are involved in cerebral susceptibility to ischemia, given the lower risk of stroke associated with ocular TIAs. However, the association was diminished and was no longer statistically significant after adjustment for hypertension.
Our study had some shortcomings. First, in common with most other published studies of the genetic epidemiology of stroke, details of the FHx were limited. Not all of our studies recorded the age at which stroke or MI occurred in the relative, and we had no information on the subtype of stroke in the FDR. In particular, we were not able to reliably distinguish between ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke in FDRs because many of their strokes predated routine brain imaging. Nevertheless, although this limited our analyses to some extent, it is unlikely to have led to any systematic bias because hypertension has a similarly strong association with ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke.25 Therefore, it is unlikely that the confounding of heritability by hypertension we found is accounted for by inclusion of some FDR with hemorrhagic stroke. Second, although we used FHx as a possible indicator for genetic influences, familial clustering of a disease can also be attributable to a shared environment. Third, it is possible that patients with FHx were more likely to have had health screening before their TIA than patients without FHx. However, this would be true for FHxstroke and FHxMI. Therefore, it is unlikely that the strong association of FHxstroke but not FHxMI with highest-ever BP is accounted for by this potential bias. Finally, the lack of significant heterogeneity between the studies could reflect the comparatively small size of each individual cohort.
In conclusion, we found a strong association between FHxstroke, history of hypertension, and maximum recorded premorbid BPs. In contrast to FHxMI, there was no association between FHxstroke and history of IHD or triglyceride level in the proband. Of the established IPs, our findings suggest that heritability of BP is the most important contributor to heritability of stroke. Candidate gene studies should adjust for differences in measured BP, history of hypertension, and treatment of hypertension between cases and controls.
| Acknowledgments |
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Received September 7, 2004; revision received December 3, 2004; accepted January 4, 2005.
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