Stroke is a leading cause of mortality and morbidity globally. Recent population studies have shown a decline in stroke incidence in North America, Europe, and Asia.Reference Kamal, Lindsay, Cote, Fang, Kapral and Hill 1 - Reference Jung, Lee and Kim 4 A significant minority (10-30%) of ischemic stroke patients report preceding symptoms of transient ischemic attack (TIA) and they represent a target high-risk population for stroke prevention strategies.Reference Rothwell and Warlow 5 - Reference Johnston, Gress, Browner and Sidney 7 The temporal trends of TIA are less well-understood worldwide and unknown in the Canadian population. Past epidemiological studies on incident TIA diagnosis have yielded inconsistent findings, showing increasing,Reference Kleindorfer, Panagos and Pancioli 8 stable,Reference Brown, Petty, O’Fallon, Wiebers and Whisnant 9 , Reference Lemesle, Milan, Faivre, Moreau, Giroud and Dumas 10 or decreasing temporal trends.Reference Rothwell, Coull and Giles 2 , Reference Buntinx, Devroey and Van Casteren 11 , Reference Sundararajan, Thrift, Phan, Choi, Clissold and Srikanth 12 Understanding the secular trends of TIA is an important consideration in future secondary stroke prevention studies as well as planning resource allocation after TIA. Our main objective is to study the temporal trends of TIA admissions to acute care hospitals and outcomes in Canada in the past 11 years. This period reflects the baseline just before the launch of a national stroke strategy up to the ten-year point. During this time, provinces developed their own stroke systems with variable rates of progress towards integrated stroke care by province.
We anticipate that several factors may influence the observed TIA admission rates. These include variations in disease incidence, changes in clinical practice, as well as the evolving nature of the definition of TIA. Practice changes may increase the number of TIA patients being evaluated in the emergency department and discharged to a stroke prevention clinic without hospital admission.Reference Lavallee, Meseguer and Abboud 13 Further, the diagnosis of TIA has been proposed to be changed from a time-based definition to a tissue-based one, leading to more patients being diagnosed with minor strokes instead of TIA.Reference Albers, Caplan and Easton 14 , Reference Sacco, Kasner and Broderick 15 To assess whether changes in TIA admission rates in the past decade are truly due to decreasing TIA incidence rather than simply a reflection of clinical practice changes, we performed a subpopulation analysis in the province of Ontario to evaluate the temporal trends of TIA and stroke discharge rates from the emergency department in patients who did not have inpatient hospitalization. Ontario is the most populous Canadian province with a population of 13 million and it is the first province to have established an integrated stroke care health system. 16
METHODS
We conducted a retrospective cohort study using an administrative database for all TIA patients admitted to a Canadian acute care hospital between 2003 and 2013 inclusive. The total Canadian population increased from 31.6 million to 35.5 million during the study period. 16 All Canadian citizens and permanent residents are eligible for a publicly funded and universally available health care system, administered through the 13 provincial and territorial health insurance plans. The study excludes patients admitted to hospital without a valid provincial or territorial health insurance number, including visitors from another country and temporary workers, students, or people claiming refugee status who have not yet obtained an Interim Federal Health Program, and female patients with previous history of therapeutic abortion in accordance with privacy requirements. Data were obtained from the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI). The CIHI Discharge Abstract Database (DAD) contains demographic, administrative, and discharge diagnosis data, including deaths and transfers, on all patients discharged following a hospital admission. It does not include patients who were discharged from the emergency department without inpatient admission. All hospitals are required to report to the DAD. Two exceptions are for the provinces of Manitoba, which started contributing to the DAD April 1, 2004, and Quebec, which had partial contribution during the fiscal years 2008/09 to 2011/12. 17 Additionally, we also used the CIHI National Ambulatory Care Reporting System (NACRS) database. NACRS receives demographic, administrative, and discharge data for emergency departments, including discharge diagnosis mapped to International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, 10th revision (ICD-10-CA) codes. 18 We limited the NACRS database subanalysis to the province of Ontario because all emergency departments in Ontario were mandated to report ambulatory data to NACRS throughout the entire duration of the study, whereas participation from other provinces was incomplete. Canadian administrative data have been previously shown to be valid and accurate with a specificity ranging from 88% to 99% for the diagnosis of TIA and 85% to 91% for the diagnosis of stroke using ICD-10-CA.Reference Kokotailo and Hill 19 TIAs were identified using ICD-10-CA code G45.x (except G45.4). Strokes were defined as any ischemic stroke, intracerebral hemorrhage, or subarachnoid hemorrhage and were identified using codes I60 (excluding 160.8), I61, I63 (excluding 163.6), I64, and H34.1. We only included patients who were coded TIA or stroke as the main diagnosis.
Our primary outcome was the trend of national TIA admission rates by year. We had multiple secondary outcomes. We evaluated the temporal trend of the age- and sex-adjusted rates of emergency department diagnosis of TIA and stroke in the province of Ontario. We also assessed the change in risk of readmission for stroke and stroke or TIA at 90 days after the initial hospital admission. Finally, we evaluated whether discharge location after acute hospitalization changed over time. Categories of discharge location include home without services, home with services (includes locations such as senior’s lodge, attendant care, supportive housing and assistance such as home care health care team or meals on wheels), inpatient rehabilitation centre, long-term nursing care and/or complex continuing care, death in the hospital, or other.
Statistical Methods
We calculated age- and sex-standardized TIA admission rates using the direct method and the population from the 2011 Canadian census. Significance for trend was calculated using the Kendall rank correlation coefficient, a nonparametric test for ordered differences among classes. P value <0.05 suggests a statistically significant trend and a negative rank correlation coefficient suggests a decreasing trend over years. We used logistic regression modeling to estimate adjusted odds ratios for 90-day readmissions and multivariable Poisson regression to estimate adjusted relative risks for discharge locations. Covariates used for adjustment were age, sex, Charlson-Deyo index (0-1 vs ≥2), and history of hypertension and atrial fibrillation. The Charlson-Deyo index is an administrative data adaptation of the Charlson comorbidity index involving a range of comorbid conditions, including vascular disease, end-organ failure, and malignancy.Reference Deyo, Cherkin and Ciol 20 All statistical comparisons were done using SAS 9.3 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA).
RESULTS
There were 425,799 stroke and TIA patients admitted to a Canadian acute care hospital from 2003 to 2013, of which 71,443 (16.8%) were TIA. The crude number of TIA admissions by province and year are presented in Table 1. The age- and sex-standardized rates of TIA admission in Canada decreased from 30.0 to 20.6 per 100,000 during the study period (Figure 1; Kendall rank correlation coefficient,0.96; p<0.0001).
We linked 58,833 (82.3%) TIA patients to the 90-day follow-up data. Figure 2 illustrates the crude proportion of 90-day readmission for stroke and stroke or TIA by fiscal year. With multivariate analysis, the 90-day readmission rate for stroke remained stable (adjusted odds ratio, 0.99; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.97-1.00) and the combined 90-day readmission rates for stroke or TIA per year declined slightly (adjusted OR, 0.97; 95% CI, 0.96-0.99). After acute hospitalization for TIA, patients were less likely to be discharged to a long-term care or complex continuing care institution and more likely to be discharged to their own home with additional services and support (Table 2).
In the subanalysis of TIA and stroke rates in the province of Ontario, we found a significant decrease in age- and sex-standardized rates of TIA patients discharged from the emergency department without admission. The rates dropped from 55.1 to 46.8 per 100,000 (Figure 2; Kendall rank correlation coefficient -0.71; p = 0.002). Standardized rates of stroke patients discharged from the emergency department also declined from 27.5 to 17.1 per 100,000 during the study period (Figure 2; Kendall rank correlation coefficient -0.93; p<0.0001). Moreover, TIA rates from the combined ambulatory NACRS and inpatient DAD database, reflecting both emergency department and inpatient TIA diagnoses, have also declined in the province of Ontario from 18.3 to 14.8 per 100,000 (Kendall rank correlation coefficient -0.81, p=0.005). Similarly, the combined emergency department and inpatient stroke rates in Ontario decreased from 112.7 to 100.2 per 100,000 (Kendall rank correlation coefficient -0.81, p=0.005) (Figure 3)
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DISCUSSION
In the past 11 years, the national rates for TIA admission to an acute care hospital have declined in Canada. Our finding is consistent with other population studies from Belgium (1984-1999); Oxfordshire, United Kingdom (1981-2004); and Victoria, Australia (2001-2011) that have reported a decreasing trend in incident TIA rates, despite a general aging of the population.Reference Rothwell, Coull and Giles 2 , Reference Buntinx, Devroey and Van Casteren 11 , Reference Sundararajan, Thrift, Phan, Choi, Clissold and Srikanth 12 Patients included in these studies were not necessarily admitted to an acute care hospital and cases were only included if it was an incident (first-ever) TIA. Given TIA is an episodic disease by definition, we did not restrict the current study to incident cases or define a disease-free clearance period.
There are multiple explanations underlying the decreasing TIA admission rates at a national level over an 11-year period. The last decade has seen significant advances in knowledge in vascular health and patient care. Throughout the study time frame, an increased number of stroke prevention services have emerged in Canada as a result of the implementation of stroke strategies, to different degrees, in all provinces. 21 Improvement in general cardiovascular risk management with antiplatelet therapy, lipid-lowering agents, blood pressure, and glucose management contribute to the decrease in cerebral ischemic events.Reference Sacco, Diener and Yusuf 22 - Reference Patel, MacMahon and Chalmers 26 For instance, hypertension is one of the most important modifiable risk factors for stroke. Although the prevalence of hypertension is on the rise in Canada, studies have shown that its incidence is declining and that more patients are receiving the appropriate treatment to control their blood pressure.Reference Robitaille, Dai and Waters 27 , Reference McAlister, Wilkins, Joffres, Leenen, Fodor and Gee 28 In addition, implementation of specific guidelines on carotid revascularization, anticoagulation for atrial fibrillation, and an emphasis on early evaluation times and neuroimaging may also improve secondary stroke prevention.Reference Coutts, Wein, Lindsay, Buck, Cote and Ellis 29 , Reference Kernan, Ovbiagele and Black 30 In Canada, rates of anticoagulation for stroke prevention in context of atrial fibrillation have increased in the past decade with a concomitant decrease in stroke rates.Reference Patel, Tan and Angaran 31 Ongoing research and clinical trials may also positively impact cerebral ischemic event rates.Reference Hong, Yegiaian, Lee, Lee and Saver 32 Although neither of these individual reasons may be sufficient to significantly decrease TIA admission rates, the combination of these component causes may positively influence TIA event rates.
The practice of medicine is continuously evolving, and we acknowledge that it is possible that the observed decrease in TIA admission rates is influenced by factors other than a true decrease in TIA incidence. First, our observation can result from a diagnostic ascertainment bias associated with improved neuroimaging tools and the heightened awareness of the urgency of diagnostic tests for TIA among emergency department physicians, who are often first-line in the treatment of cerebrovascular diseases. With the increasing availability of advanced neurovascular imaging, such as computed tomography angiograms and magnetic resonance imaging, physicians are more confident to exclude the diagnosis of TIA in patients with vague neurological symptoms, thus decreasing TIA rates. We think this possibility has an overall small impact on our data because we only include patients who were given the diagnosis of TIA after a complete investigation during an acute care hospital admission. Therefore, the proportion of stroke mimics in our population is expected to be small. Second, the diagnosis of TIA is shifting from a time-based definition to a tissue-based one so that patients with transient neurological deficits of vascular origin are more likely to be diagnosed as a “minor stroke” if there is imaging evidence of acute ischemia.Reference Albers, Caplan and Easton 14 , Reference Sacco, Kasner and Broderick 15 Prior models have estimated that a tissue-based TIA definition would reduce TIA incidence by 33% with an associated rise in ischemic stroke by 7%.Reference Ovbiagele, Kidwell and Saver 33 Nevertheless, instead of seeing an associated rise in stroke admissions, they have decreased in Canada during this time period.Reference Kamal, Lindsay, Cote, Fang, Kapral and Hill 1 Third, as the urgency of TIA is being increasingly understood, more patients are expected to undergo an expedited evaluation in the emergency room or a rapid-access outpatient TIA clinic, rather than being admitted to hospital. We show that rates of TIA and stroke being diagnosed and discharged from emergency departments in Ontario without admission to hospital were also declining significantly. Our data from Ontario support the idea that the decrease in TIA hospital admissions is not completely accounted for by the secular changes in clinical practice, but rather there is a true decline in TIA admissions. Nevertheless, administrative data contain limited information from outpatient clinics. The influence of rapid-access TIA clinics on the rates of TIA admissions across Canada remains uncertain. Although the rates are declining, the burden of disease is expected to rise with the aging of the Canadian population. From a clinical perspective, clinicians should be encouraged by the declining rates of TIA admission to continue routinely practicing vascular risk reduction strategies: diagnosing and treating diabetes, hypertension, and dyslipidemia, as well as discussing lifestyle modifications including smoking cessation, exercising, and observing a salt-reduced diet.Reference Coutts, Wein, Lindsay, Buck, Cote and Ellis 29
Our data suggest that outcomes after TIA may also be improved. The 90-day readmission rates for stroke or TIA is on a decreasing trend and TIA patients are less likely to be discharged to a nursing home after their acute hospitalization. However, these results must be interpreted with caution because the magnitude of the associations found is small and with our large sample size, we may have identified a statistical difference that may not translate into a clinically relevant finding.
An important strength of our study is that we used a national administrative database to follow a large, complete population for more than a decade in Canada. We acknowledge that administrative data are subject to hospital and jurisdiction-based coding variation because Canadian health care is administered by the individual provinces. By including only admitted patients, we make our case ascertainment more accurate and homogenous. Moreover, Canadian administrative data have been shown to be highly clinically accurate.Reference Kokotailo and Hill 19 Nevertheless, exceptions in accessing CIHI administrative data from Quebec leaves a gap in our data, which may affect the results. When examining the complete dataset for the 4 years where we have data from Quebec, we extrapolate that our results would be similar to those reported here if they were included. We used hospital discharge administrative database, which only captures patients admitted to an acute care hospital. Patients diagnosed with TIA in the emergency department, a rapid-access TIA clinic, or a primary care physician office are not fully captured by our study. This means that we have captured a high-risk population as these are the patients who require hospital admission. In addition, we obtained a partial perspective on TIA diagnosis in the Ontario emergency department. Finally, the administrative data used did not contain neuroimaging information. Thus, we were unable to ascertain the timing, frequency, and results of advanced neurovascular imaging, such as magnetic resonance imaging or computed tomography angiogram.
CONCLUSIONS
In conclusion, we show a decline in TIA admission rates to acute care hospital in Canada over an 11-year period. Although we recognize that the secular trends in clinical practice in medicine may influence TIA admission rates over time, we present arguments that our findings reflect a true improvement in vascular health and stroke care in Canada. Future studies dedicated to outcomes after TIA are necessary to further study recurrent ischemic event rates and disability after TIA.
Statement of Authorship
AYXY, NK, and MDH contributed to the study concept and design, data interpretation, and drafted and provided critical revision to the manuscript. MPL and JF contributed to the data collection, analysis, and interpretation and provided critical revision to the manuscript. SBC contributed to the data interpretation and provided critical revision to the manuscript.
Disclosures
The authors do not have anything to disclose.