The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Characteristics and outcomes of COVID-19 associated stroke: a UK multicentre case-control study

Characteristics and outcomes of COVID-19 associated stroke: a UK multicentre case-control study
Characteristics and outcomes of COVID-19 associated stroke: a UK multicentre case-control study
Objective We set out to determine which characteristics and outcomes of stroke are associated with COVID-19.

Methods This case-control study included patients admitted with stroke to 13 hospitals in England and Scotland between 9 March and 5 July 2020. We collected data on 86 strokes (81 ischaemic strokes and 5 intracerebral haemorrhages) in patients with evidence of COVID-19 at the time of stroke onset (cases). They were compared with 1384 strokes (1193 ischaemic strokes and 191 intracerebral haemorrhages) in patients admitted during the same time period who never had evidence of COVID-19 (controls). In addition, the whole group of stroke admissions, including another 37 patients who appeared to have developed COVID-19 after their stroke, were included in two logistic regression analyses examining which features were independently associated with COVID-19 status and with inpatient mortality.

Results Cases with ischaemic stroke were more likely than ischaemic controls to occur in Asians (18.8% vs 6.7%, p<0.0002), were more likely to involve multiple large vessel occlusions (17.9% vs 8.1%, p<0.03), were more severe (median National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score 8 vs 5, p<0.002), were associated with higher D-dimer levels (p<0.01) and were associated with more severe disability on discharge (median modified Rankin Scale score 4 vs 3, p<0.0001) and inpatient death (19.8% vs 6.9%, p<0.0001). Recurrence of stroke during the patient’s admission was rare in cases and controls (2.3% vs 1.0%, NS).

Conclusions Our data suggest that COVID-19 may be an important modifier of the onset, characteristics and outcome of acute ischaemic stroke.
0022-3050
242-248
Perry, Richard J.
0140d1ed-834b-43c3-9be0-fdcbe37e355c
Smith, Craig J
6b02b988-a9a7-48e7-9ce5-20bf00e219e0
Roffe, Christine
cbbf2f98-0aee-43c7-9b70-3049de1cfce5
Simister, Robert
14a6ed9b-0b9e-4f99-a638-f5efd5bdbe5e
Narayanamoorthi, Saravanan
71a49964-f9de-4be4-ac4d-7bba2900d6c9
Marigold, Richard
23c9f4cc-a1da-41a0-84bd-8e1aee91ed78
Willmot, Mark
cf08cf51-b88c-4711-b7d2-8159f577d962
Dixit, Anand
7f727b1a-8be9-4003-8026-ee431981001f
Hassan, Ahamad
0f34afaa-acef-4e04-b6bf-a6b069ab0401
Quinn, Terence J.
c551ae21-a849-4734-9a17-fff50375d519
Ankolekar, Sandeep
f678c7a6-6c82-4b30-9814-b076439a3dd7
Zhang, Liqun
f0dda2e0-4050-4756-85e7-7a8949fd8115
Banerjee, Soma
3461d9a3-3939-4e0b-9886-166f3e109932
Ahmed, Urwah
47fbd2c0-31d2-4586-86cc-c717358f9d64
Padmanabhan, Nishita
9dfd7404-b256-4766-a7a8-4b489ae9bdf1
Ferdinand, Phillip
3153cf8a-ea85-4c54-b60f-7bfae2229354
McGrane, Frances
f0b59263-378e-4c5f-b33a-db7a332829b1
Banaras, Azra
24924096-3cd2-40a9-9899-a7d3edc66cfd
Marks, Isobel H.
fc79e9b8-7e1f-479f-8b68-acdb85b800fa
Werring, David J.
0caabc8a-8597-4f08-9189-e8a6e6a213a6
Perry, Richard J.
0140d1ed-834b-43c3-9be0-fdcbe37e355c
Smith, Craig J
6b02b988-a9a7-48e7-9ce5-20bf00e219e0
Roffe, Christine
cbbf2f98-0aee-43c7-9b70-3049de1cfce5
Simister, Robert
14a6ed9b-0b9e-4f99-a638-f5efd5bdbe5e
Narayanamoorthi, Saravanan
71a49964-f9de-4be4-ac4d-7bba2900d6c9
Marigold, Richard
23c9f4cc-a1da-41a0-84bd-8e1aee91ed78
Willmot, Mark
cf08cf51-b88c-4711-b7d2-8159f577d962
Dixit, Anand
7f727b1a-8be9-4003-8026-ee431981001f
Hassan, Ahamad
0f34afaa-acef-4e04-b6bf-a6b069ab0401
Quinn, Terence J.
c551ae21-a849-4734-9a17-fff50375d519
Ankolekar, Sandeep
f678c7a6-6c82-4b30-9814-b076439a3dd7
Zhang, Liqun
f0dda2e0-4050-4756-85e7-7a8949fd8115
Banerjee, Soma
3461d9a3-3939-4e0b-9886-166f3e109932
Ahmed, Urwah
47fbd2c0-31d2-4586-86cc-c717358f9d64
Padmanabhan, Nishita
9dfd7404-b256-4766-a7a8-4b489ae9bdf1
Ferdinand, Phillip
3153cf8a-ea85-4c54-b60f-7bfae2229354
McGrane, Frances
f0b59263-378e-4c5f-b33a-db7a332829b1
Banaras, Azra
24924096-3cd2-40a9-9899-a7d3edc66cfd
Marks, Isobel H.
fc79e9b8-7e1f-479f-8b68-acdb85b800fa
Werring, David J.
0caabc8a-8597-4f08-9189-e8a6e6a213a6

Perry, Richard J., Smith, Craig J, Roffe, Christine, Simister, Robert, Narayanamoorthi, Saravanan, Marigold, Richard, Willmot, Mark, Dixit, Anand, Hassan, Ahamad, Quinn, Terence J., Ankolekar, Sandeep, Zhang, Liqun, Banerjee, Soma, Ahmed, Urwah, Padmanabhan, Nishita, Ferdinand, Phillip, McGrane, Frances, Banaras, Azra, Marks, Isobel H. and Werring, David J. (2021) Characteristics and outcomes of COVID-19 associated stroke: a UK multicentre case-control study. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry, 92 (3), 242-248. (doi:10.1136/jnnp-2020-324927).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective We set out to determine which characteristics and outcomes of stroke are associated with COVID-19.

Methods This case-control study included patients admitted with stroke to 13 hospitals in England and Scotland between 9 March and 5 July 2020. We collected data on 86 strokes (81 ischaemic strokes and 5 intracerebral haemorrhages) in patients with evidence of COVID-19 at the time of stroke onset (cases). They were compared with 1384 strokes (1193 ischaemic strokes and 191 intracerebral haemorrhages) in patients admitted during the same time period who never had evidence of COVID-19 (controls). In addition, the whole group of stroke admissions, including another 37 patients who appeared to have developed COVID-19 after their stroke, were included in two logistic regression analyses examining which features were independently associated with COVID-19 status and with inpatient mortality.

Results Cases with ischaemic stroke were more likely than ischaemic controls to occur in Asians (18.8% vs 6.7%, p<0.0002), were more likely to involve multiple large vessel occlusions (17.9% vs 8.1%, p<0.03), were more severe (median National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score 8 vs 5, p<0.002), were associated with higher D-dimer levels (p<0.01) and were associated with more severe disability on discharge (median modified Rankin Scale score 4 vs 3, p<0.0001) and inpatient death (19.8% vs 6.9%, p<0.0001). Recurrence of stroke during the patient’s admission was rare in cases and controls (2.3% vs 1.0%, NS).

Conclusions Our data suggest that COVID-19 may be an important modifier of the onset, characteristics and outcome of acute ischaemic stroke.

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

Accepted/In Press date: 15 October 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 November 2020
Published date: 1 March 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496648
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496648
ISSN: 0022-3050
PURE UUID: 2f718a63-b3d3-44ba-86b6-ac9bc5345d39

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 07 Jan 2025 18:46
Last modified: 07 Jan 2025 19:33

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Richard J. Perry
Author: Craig J Smith
Author: Christine Roffe
Author: Robert Simister
Author: Saravanan Narayanamoorthi
Author: Richard Marigold
Author: Mark Willmot
Author: Anand Dixit
Author: Ahamad Hassan
Author: Terence J. Quinn
Author: Sandeep Ankolekar
Author: Liqun Zhang
Author: Soma Banerjee
Author: Urwah Ahmed
Author: Nishita Padmanabhan
Author: Phillip Ferdinand
Author: Frances McGrane
Author: Azra Banaras
Author: Isobel H. Marks
Author: David J. Werring

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×