Multi-component Stroke Intervention and Long-term Biofunctional Outcomes: A Secondary Analyses of the SINEMA Trial
Yang, B.; Yan, X.; Zheng, Z.; Wu, F.; Ding, X.; Chen, X.; Oldenburg, B.; Song, H.; Zhou, Y.; Zhang, H.; Yuan, B.; Yan, L. L.; Gong, E.
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BackgroundThe one-year SINEMA trial demonstrated improved blood pressure (BP) control and reduced mortality up to 72 months after the intervention. This article aims to assess between-arm differences in mean annual cumulative BP and to explore whether the associations between cumulative BP and biofunctional outcomes differed by trial arm. MethodsPost-hoc secondary analysis of the SINEMA cluster-randomized trial, which recruited 1299 adults with stroke from 50 rural villages in Hebei, China, between 2017 and 2018. The 12-month intervention was followed by observational assessments at 72 and 84 months post-baseline. BP was measured during each face-to-face follow-up, assessed by blinded assessors at baseline, 12, 72, and 84 months. Mean annual cumulative systolic BP (SBP), diastolic BP (DBP), mean arterial pressure (MAP), and pulse pressure (PP) were calculated. Biofunctional outcomes included health-related quality of life, modified Rankin Scale, activities of daily living, physical function, and cognition function. ResultsAmong 897 participants (mean age 62.7 years; 40.8% female) with complete data across all assessment, the intervention arm demonstrated significantly lower mean annual cumulative SBP (-2.2 mm Hg; 95% CI, -3.9 to -0.6), DBP (-1.6 mm Hg; 95% CI, -2.4 to -0.7), and MAP (-1.8 mm Hg; 95% CI, -2.8 to -0.8), not PP, compared with usual care. Significant associations between cumulative BP and biofunctional outcomes were observed in the control arm while not in the intervention arm. Interaction effects between trial arm and cumulative BP were significant for multiple outcomes, most prominently for cumulative SBP. ConclusionsThe one-year SINEMA intervention was associated with lower cumulative BP burden over 72-84 months but did not improve overall biofunctional outcomes. Secondary analyses revealed that the association between cumulative BP burden and biofunctional decline differed by intervention arm, suggesting cumulative BP exposure may be an important long-term risk indicator and the intervention may modify BP-outcome relationships through mechanisms requiring further investigation.
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