Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease (Jul 2024)

Anemia From Inflammation After Intracerebral Hemorrhage and Relationships With Outcome

  • David J. Roh,
  • Fernanda Carvalho Poyraz,
  • Eric Mao,
  • Qi Shen,
  • Vedant Kansara,
  • Azzurra Cottarelli,
  • Sandy Song,
  • Travis Nemkov,
  • Aditya Kumar,
  • Krystalyn E. Hudson,
  • Shivani Ghoshal,
  • Soojin Park,
  • Sachin Agarwal,
  • Edward Sander Connolly,
  • Jan Claassen,
  • Lisa Baumann Kreuziger,
  • Eldad Hod,
  • Sharon Yeatts,
  • Lydia D. Foster,
  • Magdy Selim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.124.035524
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 14

Abstract

Read online

Background Baseline anemia is associated with poor intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) outcomes. However, underlying drivers for anemia and whether anemia development after ICH impacts clinical outcomes are unknown. We hypothesized that inflammation drives anemia development after ICH and assessed their relationship to outcomes. Methods and Results Patients with serial hemoglobin and iron biomarker concentrations from the HIDEF (High‐Dose Deferoxamine in Intracerebral Hemorrhage) trial were analyzed. Adjusted linear mixed models assessed laboratory changes over time. Of 42 patients, significant decrements in hemoglobin occurred with anemia increasing from 19% to 45% by day 5. Anemia of inflammation iron biomarker criteria was met in 88%. A separate cohort of 521 patients with ICH with more granular serial hemoglobin and long‐term neurological outcome data was also investigated. Separate regression models assessed whether (1) systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) scores related to hemoglobin changes over time and (2) hemoglobin changes related to poor 90‐day outcome. In this cohort, anemia prevalence increased from 30% to 71% within 2 days of admission yet persisted beyond this time. Elevated systemic inflammatory response syndrome was associated with greater hemoglobin decrements over time (adjusted parameter estimate: −0.27 [95% CI, −0.37 to −0.17]) and greater hemoglobin decrements were associated with poor outcomes (adjusted odds ratio per 1 g/dL increase, 0.76 [95% CI, 0.62–0.93]) independent to inflammation and ICH severity. Conclusions We identified novel findings that acute anemia development after ICH is common, rapid, and related to inflammation. Because anemia development is associated with poor outcomes, further work is required to clarify if anemia, or its underlying drivers, are modifiable treatment targets that can improve ICH outcomes. Registration https://www.clinicaltrials.gov Unique identifier: NCT01662895

Keywords