Classification of patients with embolic stroke of undetermined source into cardioembolic and non‐cardioembolic profile subgroups
Author(s) -
Martin Max Christian,
Sichtermann Thorsten,
Schürmann Kolja,
Habib Pardes,
Wiesmann Martin,
Schulz Jörg B.,
Nikoubashman Omid,
Pinho João,
Reich Arno
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
european journal of neurology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.881
H-Index - 124
eISSN - 1468-1331
pISSN - 1351-5101
DOI - 10.1111/ene.15356
Subject(s) - medicine , etiology , stroke (engine) , embolic stroke , cardiology , diabetes mellitus , revascularization , heart failure , prospective cohort study , ischemic stroke , myocardial infarction , ischemia , mechanical engineering , engineering , endocrinology
Abstract Background and purpose It is currently thought that embolic stroke of undetermined source (ESUS) has diverse underlying hidden etiologies, of which cardioembolism is one of the most important. The subgroup of patients with this etiology could theoretically benefit from oral anticoagulation, but it remains unclear if these patients can be correctly identified from other ESUS subgroups and which markers should be used. We aimed to determine whether a machine‐learning (ML) model could discriminate between ESUS patients with cardioembolic and those with non‐cardioembolic profiles using baseline demographic and laboratory variables. Methods Based on a prospective registry of consecutive ischemic stroke patients submitted to acute revascularization therapies, an ML model was trained using the age, sex and 11 selected baseline laboratory parameters of patients with known stroke etiology, with the aim of correctly identifying patients with cardioembolic and non‐cardioembolic etiologies. The resulting model was used to classify ESUS patients into those with cardioembolic and those with non‐cardioembolic profiles. Results The ML model was able to distinguish patients with known stroke etiology into cardioembolic or non‐cardioembolic profile groups with excellent accuracy (area under the curve = 0.82). When applied to ESUS patients, the model classified 40.3% as having cardioembolic profiles. ESUS patients with cardioembolic profiles were older, more frequently female, more frequently had hypertension, less frequently were active smokers, had higher CHA 2 DS 2 ‐VASc (Congestive heart failure or left ventricular systolic dysfunction, Hypertension, Age ≥ 75 [doubled], Diabetes, Stroke/transient ischemic attack [doubled], Vascular disease, Age 65–74, and Sex category) scores, and had more premature atrial complexes per hour. Conclusions An ML model based on baseline demographic and laboratory variables was able to classify ESUS patients into cardioembolic or non‐cardioembolic profile groups and predicted that 40% of the ESUS patients had a cardioembolic profile.