TY - JOUR
T1 - The Stroke RiskometerTM App
T2 - Validation of a data collection tool and stroke risk predictor
AU - for the Stroke Riskometer
AU - Parmar, Priya
AU - Krishnamurthi, Rita
AU - Ikram, M. Arfan
AU - Hofman, Albert
AU - Mirza, Saira S.
AU - Varakin, Yury
AU - Kravchenko, Michael
AU - Piradov, Michael
AU - Thrift, Amanda G.
AU - Norrving, Bo
AU - Wang, Wenzhi
AU - Mandal, Dipes Kumar
AU - Barker-Collo, Suzanne
AU - Sahathevan, Ramesh
AU - Davis, Stephen
AU - Saposnik, Gustavo
AU - Kivipelto, Miia
AU - Sindi, Shireen
AU - Bornstein, Natan M.
AU - Giroud, Maurice
AU - Béjot, Yannick
AU - Brainin, Michael
AU - Poulton, Richie
AU - Narayan, K. M.Venkat
AU - Correia, Manuel
AU - Freire, António
AU - Kokubo, Yoshihiro
AU - Wiebers, David
AU - Mensah, George
AU - Bindhim, Nasser F.
AU - Barber, P. Alan
AU - Pandian, Jeyaraj Durai
AU - Hankey, Graeme J.
AU - Mehndiratta, Man Mohan
AU - Azhagammal, Shobhana
AU - Ibrahim, Norlinah Mohd
AU - Abbott, Max
AU - Rush, Elaine
AU - Hume, Patria
AU - Hussein, Tasleem
AU - Bhattacharjee, Rohit
AU - Purohit, Mitali
AU - Feigin, Valery L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 World Stroke Organization 10 2 February 2015 10.1111/ijs.12411 Research Research © 2014 The Authors. International Journal of Stroke published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of World Stroke Organization.
PY - 2015/2/1
Y1 - 2015/2/1
N2 - Background: The greatest potential to reduce the burden of stroke is by primary prevention of first-ever stroke, which constitutes three quarters of all stroke. In addition to population-wide prevention strategies (the 'mass' approach), the 'high risk' approach aims to identify individuals at risk of stroke and to modify their risk factors, and risk, accordingly. Current methods of assessing and modifying stroke risk are difficult to access and implement by the general population, amongst whom most future strokes will arise. To help reduce the burden of stroke on individuals and the population a new app, the Stroke RiskometerTM, has been developed. We aim to explore the validity of the app for predicting the risk of stroke compared with current best methods. Methods: 752 stroke outcomes from a sample of 9501 individuals across three countries (New Zealand, Russia and the Netherlands) were utilized to investigate the performance of a novel stroke risk prediction tool algorithm (Stroke RiskometerTM) compared with two established stroke risk score prediction algorithms (Framingham Stroke Risk Score [FSRS] and QStroke). We calculated the receiver operating characteristics (ROC) curves and area under the ROC curve (AUROC) with 95% confidence intervals, Harrels C-statistic and D-statistics for measure of discrimination, R2 statistics to indicate level of variability accounted for by each prediction algorithm, the Hosmer-Lemeshow statistic for calibration, and the sensitivity and specificity of each algorithm. Results: The Stroke RiskometerTM performed well against the FSRS five-year AUROC for both males (FSRS=75·0% (95% CI 72·3%-77·6%), Stroke RiskometerTM=74·0(95% CI 71·3%-76·7%) and females [FSRS=70·3% (95% CI 67·9%-72·8%, Stroke RiskometerTM=71·5% (95% CI 69·0%-73·9%)], and better than QStroke [males - 59·7% (95% CI 57·3%-62·0%) and comparable to females=71·1% (95% CI 69·0%-73·1%)]. Discriminative ability of all algorithms was low (C-statistic ranging from 0·51-0·56, D-statistic ranging from 0·01-0·12). Hosmer-Lemeshow illustrated that all of the predicted risk scores were not well calibrated with the observed event data (P<0·006). Conclusions: The Stroke RiskometerTM is comparable in performance for stroke prediction with FSRS and QStroke. All three algorithms performed equally poorly in predicting stroke events. The Stroke RiskometerTM will be continually developed and validated to address the need to improve the current stroke risk scoring systems to more accurately predict stroke, particularly by identifying robust ethnic/race ethnicity group and country specific risk factors. International Journal of Stroke
AB - Background: The greatest potential to reduce the burden of stroke is by primary prevention of first-ever stroke, which constitutes three quarters of all stroke. In addition to population-wide prevention strategies (the 'mass' approach), the 'high risk' approach aims to identify individuals at risk of stroke and to modify their risk factors, and risk, accordingly. Current methods of assessing and modifying stroke risk are difficult to access and implement by the general population, amongst whom most future strokes will arise. To help reduce the burden of stroke on individuals and the population a new app, the Stroke RiskometerTM, has been developed. We aim to explore the validity of the app for predicting the risk of stroke compared with current best methods. Methods: 752 stroke outcomes from a sample of 9501 individuals across three countries (New Zealand, Russia and the Netherlands) were utilized to investigate the performance of a novel stroke risk prediction tool algorithm (Stroke RiskometerTM) compared with two established stroke risk score prediction algorithms (Framingham Stroke Risk Score [FSRS] and QStroke). We calculated the receiver operating characteristics (ROC) curves and area under the ROC curve (AUROC) with 95% confidence intervals, Harrels C-statistic and D-statistics for measure of discrimination, R2 statistics to indicate level of variability accounted for by each prediction algorithm, the Hosmer-Lemeshow statistic for calibration, and the sensitivity and specificity of each algorithm. Results: The Stroke RiskometerTM performed well against the FSRS five-year AUROC for both males (FSRS=75·0% (95% CI 72·3%-77·6%), Stroke RiskometerTM=74·0(95% CI 71·3%-76·7%) and females [FSRS=70·3% (95% CI 67·9%-72·8%, Stroke RiskometerTM=71·5% (95% CI 69·0%-73·9%)], and better than QStroke [males - 59·7% (95% CI 57·3%-62·0%) and comparable to females=71·1% (95% CI 69·0%-73·1%)]. Discriminative ability of all algorithms was low (C-statistic ranging from 0·51-0·56, D-statistic ranging from 0·01-0·12). Hosmer-Lemeshow illustrated that all of the predicted risk scores were not well calibrated with the observed event data (P<0·006). Conclusions: The Stroke RiskometerTM is comparable in performance for stroke prediction with FSRS and QStroke. All three algorithms performed equally poorly in predicting stroke events. The Stroke RiskometerTM will be continually developed and validated to address the need to improve the current stroke risk scoring systems to more accurately predict stroke, particularly by identifying robust ethnic/race ethnicity group and country specific risk factors. International Journal of Stroke
KW - Prevention
KW - Stroke prediction
KW - Stroke riskometer app
KW - Validation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84921613442&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/ijs.12411
DO - 10.1111/ijs.12411
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AN - SCOPUS:84921613442
VL - 10
SP - 231
EP - 244
JO - International Journal of Stroke
JF - International Journal of Stroke
SN - 1747-4930
IS - 2
ER -