Prevalence of Patent Foramen Ovale in a Cohort of Children With Cryptogenic Ischemic Stroke.

Publication/Presentation Date

11-23-2021

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: To determine the significance of patent foramen ovale (PFO) in childhood stroke, we compared PFO prevalence, PFO features, and stroke recurrence risk in 25 children with cryptogenic arterial ischemic stroke (AIS), 54 children with AIS from a known etiology, and 209 healthy controls.

METHODS: We performed a case-control analysis of a 14-year prospectively enrolled single-center cohort of children with AIS who underwent transthoracic echocardiogram (TTE) and compared them to TTEs of otherwise healthy children evaluated for benign cardiac concerns. Stroke patients 29 days to 18 years of age at stroke ictus with confirmed acute AIS on imaging, availability of complete diagnostic studies of stroke risk factors, including TTE images available for central review, and at least 1 follow-up evaluation after index stroke were included. Presence of PFO and high-risk PFO features were assessed by 2 independent, blinded reviewers and compared between groups with the Fisher exact test. Stroke/TIA recurrence risk was determined from Cox proportional hazards models.

RESULTS: Of 154 children with first-ever AIS, 79 were eligible; 25 had cryptogenic AIS, and 54 had a known cause. PFO prevalence was higher in the cryptogenic group (7, 28%) compared to both the known stroke etiology group (3, 5.6%,

DISCUSSION: PFO prevalence was higher in children with cryptogenic stroke compared to patients with AIS with known etiology and healthy controls. PFO was not associated with increased recurrence risk. Optimal secondary preventive treatment in children with cryptogenic stroke and PFO remains uncertain and requires further study.

CLASSIFICATION OF EVIDENCE: This study provides Class III evidence that children with cryptogenic ischemic stroke have an increased frequency of PFO compared to children with ischemic stroke of known etiology and healthy controls.

Volume

97

Issue

21

First Page

2096

Last Page

2096

ISSN

1526-632X

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences | Pediatrics

PubMedID

34649876

Department(s)

Department of Pediatrics

Document Type

Article

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