Stroke effects studied
Stroke appears to cut life expectancy by one third.
A new study has found almost two thirds of acute stroke patients fail to survive more than a decade and have high risk of recurrence, prompting researchers to call for better patient care.
University of Queensland researchers analysed data from more than 300,000 patients admitted to hospital following a sudden stroke between 2008 and 2017 in Australia and New Zealand.
The team also investigated how many years were lost to stroke by comparing a patient’s predicted life expectancy with the length of actual survival.
Only 36.4 per cent of patients survived beyond 10 years, and 26.8 per cent had another stroke.
“We found that a stroke reduced a patient’s life expectancy by five and a half years on average, compared with the general population,” said study leader, epidemiologist Dr Yang Peng,
“In proportional terms, this meant a stroke reduced a person’s life expectancy by one third.
“Patients with a haemorrhagic stroke who have bleeding in the brain are at greater risk of death, another stroke and reduced life expectancy, than those with an ischemic stroke, which is caused by a burst blood vessel.”
Study co-author, Dr Kathryn Colebourne, a stroke and general physician at The Prince Charles Hospital, said the findings reinforce the need for concerted efforts to improve acute stroke care.
“We need stroke networks of care to rapidly identify patients who have had a stroke, provide them with access to important and time-sensitive treatment, such as thrombolysis, a clot busting medication, and endovascular therapy, a specialised procedure to remove blood clots in the vessels to the brain,” Dr Colebourne said.
“We also need dedicated stroke units to provide multidisciplinary care for these patients which is known to reduce death and disability after a stroke.”
Dr Peng said there should also be a focus on lifestyle and risk factor modifications for secondary prevention, given the number of patients who will have a recurrent stroke.
“Very few population studies have explored the long-term outcomes of stroke,” he said.
“This information is crucial for patients to understand their prognosis, and for health professionals seeking to improve stroke care and preventative measures.”