Abstract

The epidemiological characteristics of transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) in China are unclear. In 2013, we conducted a nationally representative, door-to-door epidemiological survey on TIA in China using a complex, multistage, probability sampling design. Results showed that the weighted prevalence of TIA in China was 103.3 [95% confidence interval (CI): 83.9–127.2] per 100,000 in the population, 92.4 (75.0–113.8) per 100,000 among men, and 114.7 (87.2–151.0) per 100,000 among women. The weighted incidence of TIA was 23.9 (17.8–32.0) per 100,000 in the population, 21.3 (14.3–31.5) per 100,000 among men, and 26.6 (17.0–41.7) per 100,000 among women. No difference in average prognosis was found between TIA and stroke in the population. Weighted risk of stroke among TIA patients was 9.7% (6.5–14.3%), 11.1% (7.5–16.1%), and 12.3% (8.4–17.7%) at 2, 30, and 90 days, respectively. The risk of stroke was higher among male patients with a history of TIA than among female patients with a history of TIA (OR: 2.469; 95% CI: 1.172–5.201; P = 0.018), and higher among TIA patients with hypertension than among TIA patients without hypertension (OR: 2.671; 1.547–4.613; P < 0.001). It can be concluded that there are an estimated 1.35 million TIA patients nationwide, with 0.31 million new cases of TIA annually in China. TIA patients were not better managed prior to a stroke event. Early risk of stroke among TIA patients is high. Sex and hypertension may be stroke-associated prognostic factors among TIA patients. TIA clinics and surveillance should be integrated into the national health-care system.

Highlights

  • A transient ischemic attack (TIA) requires special attention because it is a harbinger of a stroke event

  • Among the 596,536 people evaluated for the prevalence analysis, 829 cases (326 definite plus 503 probable) of first-ever TIAs in a lifetime were investigated on August 31, 2013

  • Among the 595,711 people assessed for the incidence analysis, 183 (82 definite and 101 probable) first-ever TIAs were found between September 1, 2012 and August 31, 2013

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Summary

Introduction

A transient ischemic attack (TIA) requires special attention because it is a harbinger of a stroke event. Epidemiological data on TIA events in the general population may be different from clinical data from hospital-based studies and better suited for the prevention and control of TIA and stroke in the general population. It may be more meaningful to estimate TIA prognosis in the population on the basis of TIA prevalence and incidence in the population. It is unclear whether a difference between TIA and stroke prognosis exists. Early stroke risk and stroke-associated prognostic factors in all cases of TIA survivors in the population are unclear. We investigated the prevalence, incidence, prognosis, early stroke risk, and stroke-associated prognostic factors of TIA in China by traditional epidemiological methods

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