Intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is attributable to cerebral small vessel disease (cSVD), which includes cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) and hypertensive-cSVD (HTN-cSVD). HTN-cSVD includes patients with strictly deep ICH/microbleeds and mixed location ICH/microbleeds, the latter representing a more severe form of HTN-cSVD. We test the hypothesis that more severe forms of HTN-cSVD are related to worse hypertension control in long-term follow-up after ICH. From consecutive non-traumatic ICH patients admitted to a tertiary care center, we classified the ICH as CAA, strictly deep ICH/microbleeds, and mixed-location ICH/microbleeds. CSVD burden was quantified using a validated MRI-based score (range: 0-6 points). We created a multivariable (linear mixed effects) model adjusting for age, sex, race, year of inclusion, hypertension, and antihypertensive medication usage to investigate the association of average systolic blood pressure (SBP) during follow-up with cSVD etiology/severity. 796 ICH survivors were followed for a median of 48.8months (IQR 41.5-60.4). CAA-related ICH survivors (n = 373) displayed a lower median SBP (138mmHg, IQR 133-142mmHg) compared to those of strictly deep ICH (n = 222, 141mmHg, IQR 136-143mmHg, p = 0.04), and mixed location ICH/microbleeds (n = 201, 142mmHg, IQR 135-144mmHg, p = 0.02). In the multivariable analysis, mixed location ICH/microbleeds (effect: + 3.8mmHg, SE: 1.3mmHg, p = 0.01) and increasing cSVD severity (+ 1.8mmHg per score point, SE: 0.8mmHg, p = 0.03) were associated with higher SBP in follow-up. CSVD severity and subtype predicts long-term hypertension control in ICH patients.
Read full abstract