03385nas a2200385 4500000000100000008004100001100001400042700001500056700001400071700001300085700001400098700001300112700001400125700001900139700001300158700001500171700002100186700002000207700001700227700001400244700001200258700001400270700002100284700001200305700001100317700002300328700001300351700001400364245013500378250001500513300001300528490000700541520240000548020005102948 2015 d1 aFeigin V.1 aTheadom A.1 aArroll B.1 aJones A.1 aBonita R.1 aBrown P.1 aTobias M.1 aAnderson Craig1 aParag V.1 aBennett D.1 aKrishnamurthi R.1 aBarker-Collo S.1 aMcPherson K.1 aBarber P.1 aWitt E.1 aAbbott M.1 aBhattacharjee R.1 aRush E.1 aSuh F.1 aRathnasabapathy Y.1 aB. Ao Te1 aParmar P.00a30-Year Trends in Stroke Rates and Outcome in Auckland, New Zealand (1981-2012): A Multi-Ethnic Population-Based Series of Studies a2015/08/21 ae01346090 v103 a
BACKGROUND: Insufficient data exist on population-based trends in morbidity and mortality to determine the success of prevention strategies and improvements in health care delivery in stroke. The aim of this study was to determine trends in incidence and outcome (1-year mortality, 28-day case-fatality) in relation to management and risk factors for stroke in the multi-ethnic population of Auckland, New Zealand (NZ) over 30-years. METHODS: Four stroke incidence population-based register studies were undertaken in adult residents (aged >/=15 years) of Auckland NZ in 1981-1982, 1991-1992, 2002-2003 and 2011-2012. All used standard World Health Organization (WHO) diagnostic criteria and multiple overlapping sources of case-ascertainment for hospitalised and non-hospitalised, fatal and non-fatal, new stroke events. Ethnicity was consistently self-identified into four major groups. Crude and age-adjusted (WHO world population standard) annual incidence and mortality with corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated per 100,000 people, assuming a Poisson distribution. RESULTS: 5400 new stroke patients were registered in four 12 month recruitment phases over the 30-year study period; 79% were NZ/European, 6% Maori, 8% Pacific people, and 7% were of Asian or other origin. Overall stroke incidence and 1-year mortality decreased by 23% (95% CI 5%-31%) and 62% (95% CI 36%-86%), respectively, from 1981 to 2012. Whilst stroke incidence and mortality declined across all groups in NZ from 1991, Maori and Pacific groups had the slowest rate of decline and continue to experience stroke at a significantly younger age (mean ages 60 and 62 years, respectively) compared with NZ/Europeans (mean age 75 years). There was also a decline in 28-day stroke case fatality (overall by 14%, 95% CI 11%-17%) across all ethnic groups from 1981 to 2012. However, there were significant increases in the frequencies of pre-morbid hypertension, myocardial infarction, and diabetes mellitus, but a reduction in frequency of current smoking among stroke patients. CONCLUSIONS: In this unique temporal series of studies spanning 30 years, stroke incidence, early case-fatality and 1-year mortality have declined, but ethnic disparities in risk and outcome for stroke persisted suggesting that primary stroke prevention remains crucial to reducing the burden of this disease.
a1932-6203 (Electronic)