Abstract

Objective: To determine the frequency and characteristics of symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage in a population-based study Patients and Methods: The population-based Mayo Clinic Study of Aging included 4,994 participants age ≥50 years entered from 11/29/2004 to 3/11/2017. Participants with intracranial hemorrhage were identified using the Rochester Epidemiology Project medical records linkage system. Medical records of these individuals were reviewed. Each hemorrhage was classified as deep, lobar, or cerebellar intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) or convexity subarachnoid hemorrhage (cSAH). Traumatic, subdural, non-convexal SAH, and epidural hemorrhages were excluded. Patient demographics, presence of hypertension, antithrombotic regimen, APOE genotype, and amyloid PET scan results were collected when available. Individuals with hemorrhages were matched 3:1 on age and gender to controls without symptomatic hemorrhage. Analyses within the cases and between the groups were performed. Results: Symptomatic hemorrhages were identified in 57 individuals for a frequency of 1.14%. Twenty-one were classified as deep, 26 lobar, 5 cerebellar, and 5 cSAH. Mean age at the time of hemorrhage was 80.9 years (SD ±7.9). 54.4% of hemorrhages occurred in men. Hypertension was present in 45.6%. Of those with lobar ICH or cSAH, 87.1% were on an antithrombotic compared to 65.6% of controls (p=0.02) and 32.3% of these were on warfarin compared to 12.9% of controls (p=0.01). APOE genotype was available in 54 of the 57. APOE e2 and/or e4 was found in 46.7% of those with lobar ICH/cSAH compared to 39.1% of controls (p=0.47) and 35.0% of those with deep ICH versus 39.3% of controls (p=0.73). Of the 31 with either lobar ICH or cSAH, 7 underwent amyloid PET scans; of these, 71.4% were abnormal compared to 42.9% of controls with mean SUVR of 1.911 and 1.565, respectively (p=0.08). Conclusions: Symptomatic ICH occurred in approximately 1 in 100 individuals age 50-94 years in this population-based study. In a matched case-control study, antithrombotic use (particularly warfarin) was statistically associated with the development of an ICH. While only a subset underwent amyloid PET, there was a trend towards greater amyloid load in those who developed a lobar or cSAH compared to controls.

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