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  • The Ethnic/Racial Variation...
    Woo, Daniel; Rosand, Jonathan; Kidwell, Chelsea; McCauley, Jacob L; Osborne, Jennifer; Brown, Mark W; West, Sandra E; Rademacher, Eric W; Waddy, Salina; Roberts, Jamie N; Koch, Sebastian; Gonzales, Nicole R; Sung, Gene; Kittner, Steven J; Birnbaum, Lee; Frankel, Michael; Testai, Fernando Daniel; Hall, Christiana E; Elkind, Mitchell S V; Flaherty, Matthew; Coull, Bruce; Chong, Ji Y; Warwick, Tanya; Malkoff, Marc; James, Michael L; Ali, Latisha K; Worrall, Bradford B; Jones, Floyd; Watson, Tiffany; Leonard, Anne; Martinez, Rebecca; Sacco, Ralph I; Langefeld, Carl D

    Stroke (1970), 10/2013, Letnik: 44, Številka: 10
    Journal Article

    Epidemiological studies of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) have consistently demonstrated variation in incidence, location, age at presentation, and outcomes among non-Hispanic white, black, and Hispanic populations. We report here the design and methods for this large, prospective, multi-center case-control study of ICH. The Ethnic/Racial Variations of Intracerebral Hemorrhage (ERICH) study is a multi-center, prospective case-control study of ICH. Cases are identified by hot-pursuit and enrolled using standard phenotype and risk factor information and include neuroimaging and blood sample collection. Controls are centrally identified by random digit dialing to match cases by age (±5 years), race, ethnicity, sex, and metropolitan region. As of March 22, 2013, 1655 cases of ICH had been recruited into the study, which is 101.5% of the target for that date, and 851 controls had been recruited, which is 67.2% of the target for that date (1267 controls) for a total of 2506 subjects, which is 86.5% of the target for that date (2897 subjects). Of the 1655 cases enrolled, 1640 cases had the case interview entered into the database, of which 628 (38%) were non-Hispanic black, 458 (28%) were non-Hispanic white, and 554 (34%) were Hispanic. Of the 1197 cases with imaging submitted, 876 (73.2%) had a 24 hour follow-up CT available. In addition to CT imaging, 607 cases have had MRI evaluation. The ERICH study is a large, case-control study of ICH with particular emphasis on recruitment of minority populations for the identification of genetic and epidemiological risk factors for ICH and outcomes after ICH.