To provide patient-specific recommendations for secondary stroke prevention in childhood.
Approximately 10% of children with arterial ischemic stroke (AIS) suffer recurrent stroke, with children with cerebral arteriopathy at greatest risk. However, long-term secondary stroke prevention recommendations do not account for underlying stroke etiologies.
A retrospective single-institution study was performed to identify children with initial and recurrent AIS (age 1 month-18 years) between 2009 and 2022. Patients identified using diagnostic codes for AIS were reviewed to confirm diagnosis, clinical and neuroimaging data. 95% risk estimates were calculated using a beta-binomial model (beta(2,10) prior).
This confirms the Vascular effects of Infection in Pediatric Stroke (VIPS) study, which showed that children with arteriopathy, particularly progressive arteriopathy, are at highest risk of stroke recurrence, and underscores the importance of diagnosing underlying arteriopathies. Patient-specific recurrence risk counseling and antithrombotic treatment should be tailored by stroke pathophysiology and time since stroke.