BMC Cardiovascular Disorders (Aug 2022)

Long-term outcome of a pragmatic trial of multifaceted intervention (STROKE-CARD care) to reduce cardiovascular risk and improve quality-of-life after ischaemic stroke and transient ischaemic attack: study protocol

  • Christian Boehme,
  • Lena Domig,
  • Silvia Komarek,
  • Thomas Toell,
  • Lukas Mayer,
  • Benjamin Dejakum,
  • Stefan Krebs,
  • Raimund Pechlaner,
  • Alexandra Bernegger,
  • Christoph Mueller,
  • Gerhard Rumpold,
  • Andrea Griesmacher,
  • Marion Vigl,
  • Gudrun Schoenherr,
  • Christoph Schmidauer,
  • Julia Ferrari,
  • Wilfried Lang,
  • Michael Knoflach,
  • Stefan Kiechl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12872-022-02785-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background Patients with ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack (TIA) are at high risk of incident cardiovascular events and recurrent stroke. Despite compelling evidence about the efficacy of secondary prevention, a substantial gap exists between risk factor management in real life and that recommended by international guidelines. We conducted the STROKE-CARD trial (NCT02156778), a multifaceted pragmatic disease management program between 2014 and 2018 with follow-up until 2019. This program successfully reduced cardiovascular risk and improved health-related quality of life and functional outcome in patients with acute ischaemic stroke or TIA within 12 months after the index event. To investigate potential long-term effects of STROKE-CARD care compared to standard care, an extension of follow-up is warranted. Methods We aim to include all patients from the STROKE-CARD trial (n = 2149) for long-term follow-up between 2019 and 2021 with the study visit scheduled 3–6 years after the stroke/TIA event. The co-primary endpoint is the composite of major recurrent cardiovascular events (nonfatal stroke, nonfatal myocardial infarction, and vascular death) from hospital discharge until the long-term follow-up visit and health-related quality of life measured with the European Quality of Life-5 Dimensions (EQ-5D-3L) at the final visit. Secondary endpoints include overall mortality, long-term functional outcome, and target-level achievement in risk factor management. Discussion This long-term follow-up will provide evidence on whether the pragmatic post-stroke/TIA intervention program STROKE-CARD is capable of preventing recurrent cardiovascular events and improving quality-of-life in the long run. Trial registration clinicaltrials.gov: NCT04205006 on 19 December 2019.

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