Abstract
Background
Secondary prevention of stroke has been shown to dramatically reduce recurrence and has been described as suboptimal.
Objective
To analyse patients' awareness and knowledge about cerebrovascular risk factors (CVRF) and their influence on CVRF control.
Methods
Patients (n = 164) who were attending a stroke outpatient clinic for the first time after hospital discharge (3 months) for a first stroke were asked to answer a short questionnaire including questions on awareness and knowledge of CVRF, visits to a CVRF specialist, number of visits to a general practitioner, adherence to drug treatments, cigarette smoking and cessation.
Results
CVRF were spontaneously mentioned as relevant for their stroke by only13% of patients. A specialist was visited by only one‐third of the patients and a general practitioner was not visited at all by 27% of the patients since their stroke. Awareness was inversely correlated with older age and good recovery. More than half of the patients had high blood pressure (≥140 mmHg for systolic and ≥90 mmHg for diastolic values) at the time of follow‐up. These high values were correlated with poor awareness. Appropriate secondary stroke prevention measures were not received by one‐fourth of the patients; this was also correlated with poor awareness.
Conclusions
CVRF control is not optimal and is at least partially related to patients' awareness and knowledge and suboptimal medical follow‐up. Older patients and patients with excellent recovery are at particular risk for poor awareness and CVRF control.
Stroke is the third leading cause of death, the second cause of dementia and the first leading cause of physical disability in adults in Western countries.1 Despite recent advances in acute treatment, these newer treatments are delivered in fewer than 5% of cases.2 Thus, neuro‐rehabilitation and secondary prevention of stroke remain the mainstay in the management of stroke. Patients with stroke have 15 times higher risk of recurrence of stroke than the general population3 and this risk is further increased in the presence of cerebrovascular risk factors (CVRF).4,5,6 According to the European Stroke Initiative,7 these risk factors include systemic arterial hypertension, myocardial infarction, atrial fibrillation, diabetes mellitus, high cholesterol levels, carotid artery disease, smoking and alcohol use, some of them depending on patients' habits.8 A lot of evidence exists for a decrease in recurrence of stroke after receiving treatment for CVRF.9,10 Secondary stroke prevention, remains suboptimal. For instance, Girot et al11 reported that according to the European guidelines for stroke management, 78% of patients who had a stroke in the past 6 years did not receive appropriate secondary prevention measures.11 We hypothesise that patients' awareness and knowledge could have a role in suboptimal post‐stroke management. The aim of this work is therefore to evaluate patients' awareness and knowledge and the factors that could influence them (age, sex, location of, origin and severity of stroke). The determinants of suboptimal secondary prevention will also be established by persistent high blood pressure 3 months after stroke.
Methods
We studied 286 consecutive patients who were attending our stroke outpatient clinic for the first time 3 months after being discharged from hospital for a first stroke between January and December 2004. At the time of stroke, patients received appropriate information regarding their CVRF as well as secondary stroke prevention before discharge. Patients who could not or refused to attend the follow‐up visit (n = 74) and those who were unable to answer the questionnaire (n = 48) were excluded. The patients who were unable to answer the questionnaire were those with dementia (n = 30) and those presenting with severe aphasia (n = 18). The remaining 164 patients were included in the study. Personal data recorded were age, sex, location and aetiology of stroke, CVRF, National Institute of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) at admission, modified Rankin Scale (mRS) at discharge, NIHSS and mRS at 3 months and current treatment. The first question of the questionnaire answered by the patients was open‐ended, to evaluate spontaneous answers. Questions 2 (“Do you think that hypertension, cigarette smoking, diabetes and/or hypercholesterolaemia could have been involved in your stroke?”) and 3 (“Have you been informed that hypertension, cigarette smoking, diabetes and/or hypercholesterolaemia are involved in stroke?”) assessed patients' knowledge and awareness. The number of visits to a specialist since stroke and those to a general practitioner were then assessed. The last three questions explored adherence to drug treatment, smoking habits and possible smoking cessation.
Scores on awareness and knowledge were developed as follows: patients received one point for each of their unmentioned CVRF in answers to questions 2 and 3. So, a patient who did not mention two of three CVRF in answer to question 2 had an awareness score of 2. Influence of age, sex, location and origin of stroke, NIHSS and mRS on both scores was then assessed.
Blood pressures were measured three times to the nearest 5 mm Hg after interview, with the patient in the supine position. The mean of the three obtained values was then calculated and recorded. High blood pressure was defined as ⩾140 mm Hg for systolic and ⩾90 mm Hg for diastolic values. The influence of age, sex, location and origin of stroke, NIHSS, mRS, high blood pressure at admission, and awareness and knowledge scores on high blood pressure at 3 months was then evaluated.
Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was carried out using the SAS package (V.9.1, 2003). For continuous variables (NIHSS, mRS), data were checked for normal distribution. Relation between two continuous variables were investigated using linear regression. Comparisons of means in two groups (eg, male and female) were made using the unpaired Student's t test. For comparisons that required the use of the means of more than two groups (eg, origins and locations of stroke), we used an analysis of variance. The χ2 test was used for frequency comparisons. Analysis of the relation between various factors and the awareness and knowledge scores and high blood pressure at 3 months was performed using multilinear regression modelling.
Results
Of the 164 patients included in the study, 95 (57.9%) were men and 69 (42.1%) were women. Mean age was 66 (range, 19–97) years. At the time of stroke, 66.5% of the patients had a history of hypertension, 24.4% of cigarette smoking, 16.5% of diabetes and 61.6% of hypercholesterolaemia. With respect to the aforementioned limits, 95 (57.9%) patients had at least one of the two values above the limits. Among the patients with a history of hypertension at the time of stroke, 74 (67.9%) of 109 still had elevated values.
In answer to question 1, 65.2% of patients admitted that they did not know the origin of their stroke, and 13.4% spontaneously mentioned one or more CVRF. Of the 109 patients known to have high blood pressure at the time of stroke, 51 (46.8%) recognised high blood pressure as CVRF, Results for cigarette smokers and smoking, patients with diabetes and diabetes and patients with a high level of cholesterol and hypercholesterolaemia were 75.0%, 48.1% and 40.6%, respectively. Of the 164 included patients, 94 (57%) did not recognise at least one CVRF. Of the 109 patients with known high blood pressure at the time of stroke, 64 (58.7%) recollect having been informed that high blood pressure is one of the CVRF. Results for cigarette smokers and smoking, patients with diabetes and diabetes and patients with a high level of cholesterol and hypercholesterolaemia were 75.0%, 40.7% and 57.4%, respectively. Of the 164 included patients, 73 (45%) did not recognise at least one CVRF. This result was significantly different from the result for question 2 (57% v 45%, χ2 test, p<0.05).
In all, 38 (34.9%) patients visited a cardiologist, 11 (27.5%) of the 40 cigarette smokers attended a smoking cessation programme and 7 (25.9%) of the 27 patients with diabetes visited a diabetologist following their stroke. The mean number of general practitioner visits per month was 0.62 (range, 0–4.21); 44 (26.8%) patients had not visited their general practitioner since their stroke. According to the patients, drug adherence was excellent. Altogether, 2.8% of patients with high blood pressure, none of the patients with diabetes, 8.9% of patients with hypercholesterolaemia and 5.6% of patients having antiaggregant or anticoagulant therapy admitted that they had forgotten to take their treatment at least once a month. Of the 40 smokers, 17 (42.5%) had quit since their stroke.
By using the logistic regression model with all the factors described above, we found that the awareness score was significantly higher for patients who were older (p<0.01) and patients with lower NIHSS at 3 months (p<0.05), whereas the knowledge score was significantly higher only for patients who were older (p<0.01).
With the use of the same model, persistent high blood pressure at 3 months was found to be significantly more frequent in patients with a higher awareness score (p<0.05).
At 3 months, 41 (25%) patients did not receive at least one of the required secondary prevention treatments. Interestingly, these patients had an awareness score significantly higher than those who received full appropriate secondary prevention treatment(mean score 1.15 v 0.77, t test, p<0.05).
Discussion
CVRF control remains a major objective in stroke follow‐up. In our study, awareness was relatively poor in patients with stroke, with <50% of CVRF being recognised as relevant. Kothari et al12 described that 43% of patients did not know a single risk factor for stroke at the time of the cerebrovascular event. In the same way, in a study assessing knowledge and awareness about stroke in a representative sample of women, Ferris et al13 also reported poor results, especially among people who are at highest risk.
We previously described that patients' beliefs could vary and diverge from doctors' opinions, with most of them being non‐medical or non‐congruent medical explanations.14 To a certain degree, we observed this again in this study, with some patients being informed that CVRF could cause stroke, but still not admitting the role of CVRF in their experience of stroke. Medical follow‐up was also non‐optimal, with only one‐third of patients visiting a specialist for their CVRF and 27% not visiting their general practitioner since their stroke.
Awareness was independently negatively influenced by older age and excellent recovery. Interestingly, patients who showed excellent recovery also visited their general practitioner less often.
Finally, blood pressure control was suboptimal at 3 months and high blood pressure was more frequent in patients with poor awareness.
This study was a single‐centre study with known limitations, which did not explore all the CVRF. A multicentre study would therefore form the next step in confirming our results and comparing them with the results of the other CVRF. Another bias could have been induced by patients refusing to attend at 3 months after discharge from hospital mainly because of poor awareness.
In conclusion, we have shown that despite an improvement in treatment, CVRF control is not optimal and may be related to the patients' awareness and knowledge and suboptimal medical follow‐up. Older patients and patients with excellent recovery are at particular risk for poor awareness and CVRF control.
Acknowledgements
We thank Dr En‐Ling Leung Ki and Sebastian Dieguez for reviewing the manuscript and Dr Rudolf Kraftsik for help in statistical analysis.
Abbreviations
CVRF - cerebrovascular risk factors
mRS - modified Rankin Scale
NIHSS - National Institute of Health Stroke Scale
Footnotes
Competing interests: None declared.
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