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Brain Communications

Publication date: 2022-03-01
Publisher: Oxford University Press

Author:

Bonkhoff, Anna K
Bretzner, Martin ; Hong, Sungmin ; Schirmer, Markus D ; Cohen, Alexander ; Regenhardt, Robert W ; Donahue, Kathleen L ; Nardin, Marco J ; Dalca, Adrian ; Giese, Anne-Katrin ; Etherton, Mark R ; Hancock, Brandon L ; Mocking, Steven JT ; McIntosh, Elissa C ; Attia, John ; Benavente, Oscar R ; Bevan, Stephen ; Cole, John W ; Donatti, Amanda ; Griessenauer, Christoph J ; Heitsch, Laura ; Holmegaard, Lukas ; Jood, Katarina ; Jimenez-Conde, Jordi ; Kittner, Steven J ; Lemmens, Robin ; Levi, Christopher R ; McDonough, Caitrin W ; Meschia, James F ; Phuah, Chia-Ling ; Rolfs, Arndt ; Ropele, Stefan ; Rosand, Jonathan ; Roquer, Jaume ; Rundek, Tatjana ; Sacco, Ralph L ; Schmidt, Reinhold ; Sharma, Pankaj ; Slowik, Agnieszka ; Soderholm, Martin ; Sousa, Alessandro ; Stanne, Tara M ; Strbian, Daniel ; Tatlisumak, Turgut ; Thijs, Vincent ; Vagal, Achala ; Wasselius, Johan ; Woo, Daniel ; Zand, Ramin ; McArdle, Patrick F ; Worrall, Bradford B ; Jern, Christina ; Lindgren, Arne G ; Maguire, Jane ; Fox, Michael D ; Bzdok, Danilo ; Wu, Ona ; Rost, Natalia S

Keywords:

Science & Technology, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, Clinical Neurology, Neurosciences, Neurosciences & Neurology, acute ischaemic stroke, functional outcomes, sex differences, lesion patterns, Bayesian hierarchical modelling, HUMAN CEREBRAL-CORTEX, AREA, MRI-GENIE and GISCOME Investigators and the International Stroke Genetics Consortium , 3202 Clinical sciences, 3209 Neurosciences, 5202 Biological psychology

Abstract:

Stroke represents a considerable burden of disease for both men and women. However, a growing body of literature suggests clinically relevant sex differences in the underlying causes, presentations and outcomes of acute ischaemic stroke. In a recent study, we reported sex divergences in lesion topographies: specific to women, acute stroke severity was linked to lesions in the left-hemispheric posterior circulation. We here determined whether these sex-specific brain manifestations also affect long-term outcomes. We relied on 822 acute ischaemic patients [age: 64.7 (15.0) years, 39% women] originating from the multi-centre MRI-GENIE study to model unfavourable outcomes (modified Rankin Scale >2) based on acute neuroimaging data in a Bayesian hierarchical framework. Lesions encompassing bilateral subcortical nuclei and left-lateralized regions in proximity to the insula explained outcomes across men and women (area under the curve = 0.81). A pattern of left-hemispheric posterior circulation brain regions, combining left hippocampus, precuneus, fusiform and lingual gyrus, occipital pole and latero-occipital cortex, showed a substantially higher relevance in explaining functional outcomes in women compared to men [mean difference of Bayesian posterior distributions (men - women) = -0.295 (90% highest posterior density interval = -0.556 to -0.068)]. Once validated in prospective studies, our findings may motivate a sex-specific approach to clinical stroke management and hold the promise of enhancing outcomes on a population level.