Prognostic factors varying with age in patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage

H Kanamaru, F Kawakita, R Asada, Y Miura… - Journal of Clinical …, 2020 - Elsevier
H Kanamaru, F Kawakita, R Asada, Y Miura, M Shiba, N Toma, H Suzuki
Journal of Clinical Neuroscience, 2020Elsevier
With the advent of an aging society, more elderly patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid
hemorrhage (aSAH) have been treated. We investigated if prognostic factors differ with age
in aSAH patients. In a prospectively maintained aSAH database at multiple institutions from
2013 to 2016, 238 patients who underwent clipping or coiling for a ruptured aneurysm within
48 h of onset were divided into elderly (≥ 75 years; 57 patients) and non-elderly groups, or
categorized into 4-age groups (< 54, 55–64, 65–74, and≥ 75 years). Prognostic factors and …
Abstract
With the advent of an aging society, more elderly patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) have been treated. We investigated if prognostic factors differ with age in aSAH patients. In a prospectively maintained aSAH database at multiple institutions from 2013 to 2016, 238 patients who underwent clipping or coiling for a ruptured aneurysm within 48 h of onset were divided into elderly (≥75 years; 57 patients) and non-elderly groups, or categorized into 4-age groups (<54, 55–64, 65–74, and ≥75 years). Prognostic factors and clinical characteristics were retrospectively analyzed. The elderly group had a higher incidence of pre-morbidities, co-morbidities, poor admission World Federation of Neurological Surgeons (WFNS) grades, modified Fisher grade 4, and resultantly 90-day poor outcomes (modified Rankin scale [mRS] 3–6). Multivariate logistic regression analyses revealed that independent determinants for poor outcomes were hypertension and modified Fisher grade 4 in the elderly group, and admission WFNS grades IV–V, systemic complications, non-procedural cerebral infarction and shunt-dependent chronic hydrocephalus in the non-elderly group. The 4-age group analyses showed that higher age group was more frequently associated with the prognostic factors. As higher age itself causes poor outcomes and more association of prognostic factors, prognostic factors in elderly patients may be rather limited.
Elsevier
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