Race-ethnicity and cerebral small vessel disease: Comparison between Chinese and white populations

Chung Tong Vincent MOK, Velandai SRIKANTH, Yun-yun XIONG, Thanh G. PHAN, Chris MORAN, Shuguang CHU, Qianhua ZHAO, Chiu Wing Winnie CHU, Adrian WONG, Zhen HONG, Xinfeng LIU, Ka Sing Lawrence WONG, Ding DING

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53 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background and Aim: Studies in stroke patients suggest that lacunar stroke and intracerebral hemorrhage might be more common in Chinese than Whites. We hypothesized that other manifestations of subclinical cerebral small vessel disease, namely white matter hyperintensities (WMH), lacunes, and microbleeds, are also more common in Chinese than Whites. We compared the community prevalence of these lesions between Han Chinese and White Australians. Methods: Magnetic resonance imaging (1•5-Tesla) was performed on participants of the Shanghai Aging Study (n = 321, mean age 69 ± 6 years) and Tasmanian Study of Cognition and Gait (n = 397, mean age 72 ± 7 years). A single-rater recorded measures of WMH, lacunes, and microbleeds. We compared lesion prevalence between age- and gender-matched subgroups from the two cohorts. Among all subjects (n = 718), we performed multivariable logistic regression to examine if race-ethnicity was independently associated with these lesions. Results: Among age- and gender-matched subjects, confluent WMH were significantly more prevalent in Chinese (38•5%) than Whites (28•4%; P = 0•01). There was no difference in the prevalence of lacunes (Chinese 29•1% vs. Whites 29•5%, P = 0•93) and microbleeds (Chinese 10•1% vs. 9•0%, P = 0•67) between Chinese and Whites. In multivariable logistic regression, Chinese ethnicity was associated with confluent WMH (odds ratio 1•7, 95% confidence interval 1•1–2•6, P = 0•01), but no differences were seen for lacunes and microbleeds. The association between Chinese ethnicity with confluent WMH became insignificant when subjects with history of stroke were excluded. Conclusions: In this population-based cross-national comparison, Han Chinese had a higher prevalence of confluent WMH than White Australians, but had a similar prevalence of lacunes and microbleeds. Copyright © 2014 The Authors. International Journal of Stroke © 2014 World Stroke Organization.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)36-42
JournalInternational Journal of Stroke
Volume9
Issue numberSupplement A100
Early online dateOct 2014
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014

Citation

Mok, V., Srikanth, V., Xiong, Y., Phan, T. G., Moran, C., Chu, S., et al. (2014). Race-ethnicity and cerebral small vessel disease: Comparison between Chinese and white populations. International Journal of Stroke, 9(supplement A100), 36-42.

Keywords

  • Cross-ethnic comparison
  • Small vessel disease

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