Stroke, Vol 25, 2343-2347, Copyright © 1994 by American Heart Association
DS May and SJ Kittner
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Although stroke mortality has been declining in the
United States for decades, recent trends in stroke incidence based on
national data have not been described. We used Medicare hospitalization
data to estimate national trends in the incidence of stroke among Americans
aged 70 years or older, and we provide evidence of the validity of the
estimate. METHODS: We defined stroke as a principal diagnosis with
International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical
Modification codes 430 to 434 or 436 to 437. We excluded many recurrent
cases from the analysis by eliminating persons hospitalized for stroke
during the 5 years preceding the index stroke. We calculated annual
adjusted incidence rates and examined trends graphically. We investigated
the effect of different exclusion periods, trends in in-hospital mortality
of stroke patients, and trends in out- of-hospital stroke mortality. We
examined trends in relation to sex, race, and age. RESULTS: The estimated
age- and sex-adjusted stroke incidence declined 9.5% from 1985 to 1989,
then increased 3.3% to 1991. The pattern did not vary with the length of
the exclusion period or when all listed diagnosis rather than principal
diagnoses were used to identify stroke cases. Incidence trends resembled
the overall trend for both men and women, for 5-year age groups, and for
whites; the trend did not change for blacks. CONCLUSIONS: Stroke incidence
declined steadily from 1985 to 1989 and then increased slightly to 1991.
Several postulated potential sources of bias were investigated and found to
be unlikely to account for the incidence decline, although some may have
contributed to the subsequent incidence increase.
ARTICLES
Use of Medicare claims data to estimate national trends in stroke incidence, 1985-1991
Office of Surveillance and Analysis, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Ga 30341.
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