Abstract

Introduction: Location specific Intracerebral Hemorrhage (ICH) characteristics and outcomes are important for risk stratification and clinical trial design. However, they have not been described at the population level. Methods: We analyzed the National Inpatient Sample (90% of US hospitalizations) from 09/2015 to 12/2017 and utilized ICD-10 codes to identify ICH patients with a primary diagnosis of either supra-tentorial (ST) or infra-tentorial (IT) hemorrhage; excluding intraventricular or unspecified location. Utilizing sampling weights, nationally representative proportions of ST and IT ICH patients across demographic, comorbidity, healthcare utilization, disease acuity and outcomes are provided. We fit survey design logistic regression models for in-hospital mortality (IHM) and home discharge (HD). Odds Ratios (OR) and 95% confidence Intervals (CI) are reported. Results: Across the analysis time period, a total of 161,395 ICH patients were identified, of whom 51,025 (31.6%) and 20,135(12.5%) had ST and IT ICH respectively. IT ICH patients (vs. ST ICH) were younger (66.9 vs. 67.9 years), with higher proportions of Black (19.1% vs. 17.6%) and un-insured (5.9% vs. 4.7%). A significantly greater proportion of IT ICH patients had prior myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, atrial fibrillation, renal disease and hypertension. Whereas the prior cerebrovascular disease, dementia, depression and alcohol abuse was associated with ST ICH. Smaller proportion of IT ICH patients (vs. ST ICH) were treated in urban teaching hospitals (81.4% vs. 83.2%). A greater proportion of IT ICH underwent invasive mechanical ventilation (58.1% vs. 46.7%), ventriculostomy (18.2% vs. 10.2%), and tracheostomy (6.4% vs. 4.6%). The total charges and charges per day were significantly higher for IT ICH patients. The overall IHM was 22.6%. A greater proportion of IT ICH patients (vs. ST ICH) experienced IHM (28.2% vs. 17.3%) and smaller proportion had HD (16.7% vs. 20.7%). In the fully adjusted models, IT ICH was associated with a significantly higher IHM (OR, CI: 1.47, 1.26 - 1.71) and lower likelihood of HD (OR, CI: 0.56, 0.46 - 0.68). Conclusion: ST and IT ICH patients have distinctive risk factor and demographic profiles. IT ICH is associated with poor outcomes.

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