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Oxford University Press, Brain Communications, 2(4), 2022

DOI: 10.1093/braincomms/fcac020

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Sex-specific lesion pattern of functional outcomes after stroke

Journal article published in 2022 by Anna K. Bonkhoff, Bonkhoff Ak, Martin Bretzner, Sungmin Hong, Markus D. Schirmer, Robert W. Regenhardt, Kathleen L. Donahue, Alexander Li Cohen, Marco J. Nardin, Adrian V. Dalca, Schirmer Md, Anne-Katrin Giese, Brandon L. Hancock, Regenhardt Rw, Steven J. T. Mocking and other authors.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

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.