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Persistent depression after transient ischemic attack predicts death
Depression was common after transient ischemic attack and persistent symptoms strongly predicted worse long-term outcomes.
*Prospective population-based cohort; Level 1b (OCEBM).

Citation

McColl AJ, Luengo-Fernandez R, Vaughan-Fowler E-R, et al. Prevalence, Predictors, and Prognosis of Depression After Transient Ischemic Attack: A Population-Based Study. Stroke. 2026;57:125–133. doi:10.1161/STROKEAHA.125.052251.

Background

Depression after stroke is common and linked to higher death rates, but less is known after transient ischemic attack. This study measured how often depression occurs after transient ischemic attack, what predicts it, and whether it relates to later health outcomes.

Patients

519 adults with a first-in-study transient ischemic attack in a defined United Kingdom population (2014–2020).

Intervention

Screening for depression at 1 and 12 months using a validated questionnaire; analysis of predictors and prognosis.

Control

Patients without depression.

Outcome

Depression prevalence/predictors; 5-year death, disability, nursing/residential home placement, and quality of life.

Follow-up Period

Depression at 1 and 12 months; outcomes up to 5 years.

Results

Depression affected 24.3% within 12 months (20.7% at 1 month; 14.9% at 12 months). Depression was not linked to an acute brain lesion on imaging, but persistent depression was strongly linked to worse outcomes.
Finding (adjusted) Effect size
Predictors of depression within 12 months: low mood at first visit Odds ratio 4.06 (95% CI, 2.31–7.15)
Predictors of depression within 12 months: pre-event disability Odds ratio 3.53 (95% CI, 1.89–6.59)
All-cause death (any depression within 12 months) Hazard ratio 2.27 (95% CI, 1.21–4.27)
All-cause death (persistent depression at 1 and 12 months) Hazard ratio 4.58 (95% CI, 2.07–10.13)
Disability within 5 years (persistent depression) Odds ratio 12.10 (95% CI, 6.18–23.7)
Nursing/residential home placement within 5 years (persistent depression) Hazard ratio 5.83 (95% CI, 1.84–18.50)
Most analyses adjusted for age, sex, health conditions, social factors, and pre-event disability.

Limitations

Depression was screened, not diagnosed clinically; some follow-up was missing; single-region study; few recurrent events limited some analyses; pandemic-era follow-up could affect mood reporting.

Funding

National Institute for Health research and major charities; potential consultant conflict noted.

Clinical Application

Screen for depression after transient ischemic attack, especially at 1 month, and re-check at 12 months; persistent symptoms signal high risk and warrant active treatment and follow-up.

Top Journal Rankings - March 2026

6 abstracts scored across 7 criteria. Click any article to expand criterion scores.
1. 6.2
Self-management of male urinary symptoms: qualitative findings from a primary care trial.
Overall: Highly relevant qualitative primary-care evidence suggesting a structured self-management booklet is valued and may improve patient experience, but the abstract lacks quantitative effectiveness and harms data, limiting confidence in the size of benefit and immediate practice change.
View 6 Criterion Scores
Primary-Care Relevance & Applicability 9.0
Addresses first-line self-management for male LUTS in general practice, using interviews drawn from a 30-site primary care trial and offering concrete suggestions for GP workflows (language, follow-up after PSA testing, booklet distribution).
Validity, Bias Control & Precision 5.0
Appropriate qualitative methods (semi-structured interviews, thematic analysis) and multi-site sampling, but findings are inherently subjective, based on purposive selection, and provide no quantitative effect estimates or precision.
Patient-Oriented Outcomes 6.0
Focuses on patient-experienced symptoms, anxiety, and quality of life, which are patient-important; however outcomes are reported narratively without standardized measurement or prespecified quantitative endpoints in the abstract.
Magnitude of Net Benefit 4.0
Many men valued the booklet and reported improved symptoms and quality of life with reduced anxiety, but the abstract provides no quantified benefit, no systematic harms assessment, and notes some found it unrewarding.
Implementability & Practicality 8.0
A self-help booklet and tailored self-management guidance are low-complexity interventions that can be integrated into routine primary care, with the main barrier described as clinical time/pressure rather than technical requirements.
Practice-Changing Potential 5.0
Provides actionable insights (avoid dismissive language, ensure LUTS follow-up post-PSA, promote self-management resources), but as a qualitative report it mainly informs implementation and patient/clinician perspectives rather than proving outcome improvement.
2. 5.3
Effect of Initiating HPV Vaccination Before Age 11 on HPV Vaccination Completion.
Overall: This retrospective primary-care–relevant study suggests age-related differences in HPV series completion, but limited methodological and effect-size reporting and reliance on a process outcome reduce confidence in the size and certainty of benefit.
View 6 Criterion Scores
Primary-Care Relevance & Applicability 9.0
HPV vaccination timing and series completion are routine, high-frequency preventive care decisions in primary care, including family medicine and pediatrics.
Validity, Bias Control & Precision 4.0
Retrospective analysis with limited methodological detail (data source, inclusion/exclusion, confounder adjustment, missingness) and incomplete reporting of precision (no confidence intervals/p-values shown), increasing risk of bias and uncertainty.
Patient-Oriented Outcomes 3.0
The main outcome is vaccine series completion, which is a process measure; the abstract does not report downstream patient outcomes such as HPV infection, dysplasia, cancer, or adverse events.
Magnitude of Net Benefit 4.0
An association is reported (OR 2.802 for completion in ages 11–14 vs other groups), but absolute differences, harms, and the specific effect of initiating before age 11 are not clearly quantified, limiting assessment of clinical net benefit.
Implementability & Practicality 7.0
Earlier initiation of an existing vaccine series is feasible in routine outpatient workflows, though the referenced multi-component, culturally tailored program may require additional resources not described in the abstract.
Practice-Changing Potential 5.0
Supports a plausible strategy (earlier initiation) for a common preventive gap, but the observational design and limited effect reporting make it more hypothesis-supporting than definitively practice-changing.
3. 4.8
Consultations with locum doctors in UK general practice: longitudinal analysis of electronic health records.
Overall: A large, primary-care–focused EHR analysis that credibly describes locum consultation patterns and regional trends, but it is observational and does not address patient outcomes or demonstrate a direct clinical benefit that would change practice.
View 6 Criterion Scores
Primary-Care Relevance & Applicability 9.0
Directly studies UK general practice consultations across many practices over 12 years, addressing a common real-world primary care staffing and service-delivery issue.
Validity, Bias Control & Precision 7.0
Large retrospective EHR cohort (914 practices) with multilevel mixed-effects modeling supports precision and handling of clustering, but observational design limits causal inference and residual confounding/measurement limitations remain.
Patient-Oriented Outcomes 1.0
Reports workforce/consultation patterns rather than patient-important clinical outcomes (no morbidity, mortality, function, quality of life, or patient experience outcomes presented).
Magnitude of Net Benefit 2.0
No intervention is tested and no benefits/harms to patients are quantified; findings are descriptive (percent of consultations by locums) without direct clinical outcome impact.
Implementability & Practicality 6.0
Results are readily interpretable for planning and benchmarking locum use, but they do not provide a concrete, actionable clinical workflow change for day-to-day practice.
Practice-Changing Potential 4.0
May influence workforce policy discussions by showing higher locum contribution and regional trends, but provides limited direct guidance likely to change individual clinical practice.
4. 4.2
Understanding persistent GP turnover using work and personal characteristics: a retrospective observational study.
Overall: Highly relevant to primary care workforce sustainability, but as a retrospective association study without reported effect sizes or patient outcomes, it offers limited certainty and limited immediately actionable guidance beyond highlighting potential intervention targets.
View 6 Criterion Scores
Primary-Care Relevance & Applicability 9.0
Directly addresses GP workforce turnover and job satisfaction in English general practice using national data, a highly relevant primary-care systems issue.
Validity, Bias Control & Precision 4.0
Retrospective observational design with regression adjustment limits causal inference; the abstract does not report effect sizes, confidence intervals, or robustness checks, reducing confidence/precision despite a reasonable sample (n=2403).
Patient-Oriented Outcomes 4.0
Outcomes are mainly clinician/job-related (autonomy, belonging, competence, job and life satisfaction, working hours) and practice turnover; patient health outcomes are not assessed.
Magnitude of Net Benefit 2.0
The study reports associations rather than testing an intervention, and provides no quantitative effect estimates in the abstract to judge clinical or practical impact or trade-offs.
Implementability & Practicality 3.0
Findings suggest potential targets for retention interventions, but no specific, actionable intervention, resource requirements, or implementation pathway is evaluated.
Practice-Changing Potential 3.0
Supports the idea that lower job satisfaction correlates with persistent turnover, but without tested solutions or quantified effects, it is more hypothesis-generating than immediately practice- or policy-changing.
5. 4.2
Evaluation of the Need for Comprehensive Care for Patients with Cystic Fibrosis.
Overall: A single-center retrospective EMR study identifies incomplete PCP integration and lower vaccination rates among adults with cystic fibrosis lacking a PCP listing, but limited design rigor and lack of patient-outcome or intervention data constrain actionable, practice-changing conclusions.
View 6 Criterion Scores
Primary-Care Relevance & Applicability 6.0
Addresses a real outpatient primary-care gap (PCP engagement, preventive screening, immunizations) but in a high-acuity, specialty-managed cystic fibrosis population from an adult CF clinic, limiting broad generalizability.
Validity, Bias Control & Precision 4.0
Retrospective, single-center EMR review (n=115) with descriptive comparisons; likely confounding (patients with/without a listed PCP may differ) and limited precision reporting (p-values given for vaccines but no effect sizes or confidence intervals).
Patient-Oriented Outcomes 4.0
Includes potentially patient-important care processes (vaccinations, cancer screening) but the primary outcome is PCP identification in the EMR and other endpoints are largely process/physiologic measures rather than direct morbidity, hospitalization, or quality-of-life outcomes.
Magnitude of Net Benefit 2.0
Does not test an intervention or quantify clinical benefit; reports lower influenza and pneumococcal vaccination rates without a PCP, but provides no absolute differences, downstream health outcomes, or harms/burdens to estimate net benefit.
Implementability & Practicality 6.0
The implied action (better integrating PCPs into CF care and improving preventive care delivery) is feasible in principle, but the abstract does not specify a practical workflow, resources, or implementation strategy to achieve it.
Practice-Changing Potential 3.0
Highlights a care gap and suggests coordination improvements, but observational single-site findings without an evaluated solution or patient-outcome impact are unlikely to change practice on their own.
6. 3.9
A Retrospective Analysis of Soft Tissue Point-of-Care Ultrasound (POCUS) in Primary Care.
Overall: A relevant primary-care descriptive study showing common soft-tissue ultrasound findings and delays, but it is retrospective, lacks patient-oriented outcomes, and does not demonstrate that POCUS changes outcomes or reduces harms.
View 6 Criterion Scores
Primary-Care Relevance & Applicability 7.5
Directly examines soft-tissue ultrasound ordering patterns from a Family Medicine practice and highlights common outpatient diagnostic questions that are relevant to primary care workflows.
Validity, Bias Control & Precision 4.0
Retrospective, single-practice descriptive analysis without a comparator group; limited ability to control bias or establish causal effects, though basic counts and wait-time distribution are clearly reported (n=168).
Patient-Oriented Outcomes 1.0
Reports imaging findings, follow-up recommendations, and time-to-completion; it does not measure patient-important outcomes such as symptom resolution, complications, functional status, or satisfaction.
Magnitude of Net Benefit 2.0
No intervention is tested and no benefits/harms are quantified; any net benefit of POCUS is suggested rather than demonstrated, aside from documenting delays to radiology ultrasound.
Implementability & Practicality 6.0
Implications (expanded POCUS training) are potentially feasible in primary care where ultrasound is available, but the abstract provides no concrete protocol, training dose, resource needs, or implementation outcomes.
Practice-Changing Potential 3.0
Generates hypotheses about training priorities (lipomas/lymph nodes/cysts) but provides no evidence that changing practice improves diagnostic accuracy, reduces downstream testing, or improves outcomes.
Score Guide: 9-10 Exceptional 7-8 Strong 5-6 Moderate 3-4 Weak 1-2 Poor
Showing top 10 of 6

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