Cerebral Venous Thrombosis - Complications and Outcomes

Sammanfattning: Cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) is a relatively rare cause of stroke, which predominantly affects working-aged adults and particularly women. The clinical course is highly miscellaneous. Data from large cohorts are scarce and knowledge on CVT complications and outcomes are limited. The overarching aim of this thesis was to investigate prognostic factors affecting clinical outcome after CVT. We investigated adult patients consecutively diagnosed with CVT from a local registry, the Sahlgrenska CVT Registry (study I), and from a newly established large international cohort from, in total, 17 hospitals, the International CVT Consortium (study II-V). Among 62 working-aged adults included from the Sahlgrenska CVT Registry, functional outcome was good as 87% were independent at long-term follow-up. However, 29% were unable to return to work and merely 19% were asymptomatic (study I). In study II-V, patients were included from the International CVT Consortium. Acute symptomatic seizure(s) occurred in 441/1,281 (34%) patients, predicted by variables related to parenchymal injury adjacent to the cerebral cortex (study II). Of 123/1,127 (11%) experiencing a first late seizure (>7 days after diagnosis), seizure recurrence rate was 70% (study III). A dural arteriovenous fistula was detected in 29/1,218 (2.4%) patients, most commonly concomitant or subsequently to the diagnosis of CVT (study IV). Acute symptomatic seizures, status epilepticus in the acute phase and dural arteriovenous fistulas were not associated with worse functional outcome (study II and IV). From risk factors affecting clinical outcome, we developed the combined SI2NCAL2C risk score to calculate individual risks of dependency or mortality at 6 months, mortality at 30-days and mortality at 1 year. The model showed promising performance in internal validations (study V). This thesis indicates that although most patients recover well and achieve independency after CVT, residual symptoms are frequent and one-quarter of working-aged adults are unable to return to work. Seizures frequently complicate the acute phase and every tenth patient experiences late seizures after CVT. The high risk of late seizure recurrence supports the diagnosis of epilepsy at time of a first late seizure. Dural arteriovenous fistulas are infrequent and mostly appear simultaneously or after CVT. The SI2NCAL2C risk score can be used with information available in routine clinical practice, to predict dependency or mortality at 6 months, mortality at 30-days and mortality at 1 year, but warrant external validation prior to implementation in clinical practice.

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