CBS 2019
CBSMD教育中心
English

科学研究

科研文章

荐读文献

Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation Represents an Anti-Inflammatory Therapy Via Reduction of Shear Stress-Induced, Piezo-1-Mediated Monocyte Activation Clinical Phenogroups in Heart Failure With Preserved Ejection Fraction: Detailed Phenotypes, Prognosis, and Response to Spironolactone Haptoglobin genotype: a determinant of cardiovascular complication risk in type 1 diabetes Noninvasive Imaging for the Evaluation of Diastolic Function: Promises Fulfilled Clinical impact of conduction disturbances in transcatheter aortic valve replacement recipients: a systematic review and meta-analysis Baseline Characteristics and Risk Profiles of Participants in the ISCHEMIA Randomized Clinical Trial 2021 ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic heart failure Effects of Icosapent Ethyl on Total Ischemic Events: From REDUCE-IT Proteomics to Improve Phenotyping in Obese Patients with Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction Long-Term Outcomes After PCI or CABG for Left Main Coronary Artery Disease According to Lesion Location

Original ResearchVolume 13, Issue 1 Part 1, January 2020

JOURNAL:JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging Article Link

Long-Term All-Cause and Cause-Specific Mortality in Asymptomatic Patients With CAC ≥1,000: Results From the CAC Consortium

AW Peng, M Mirbolouk, OA Orimoloye et al. Keywords: cardiovascular imaging; coronary artery calcium; high risk; primary prevention; risk scoring

ABSTRACT


OBJECTIVES - This study thoroughly explored the demographic and imaging characteristics, as well as the all-cause and cause-specific mortality risks of patients with a coronary artery calcium (CAC) score 1,000 in the largest dataset of this population to date.

 

BACKGROUND - CAC is commonly used to quantify cardiovascular risk. Current guidelines classify a CAC score of >300 or 400 as the highest risk group, yet little is known about the potentially unique imaging characteristics and mortality risk in individuals with a CAC score 1,000.

 

METHODS - A total of 66,636 asymptomatic adults were included from the CAC consortium, a large retrospective multicenter clinical cohort. Mean patient follow-up was 12.3 ± 3.9 years for patients with cardiovascular disease (CVD), coronary heart disease (CHD), cancer, and all-cause mortality. Multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression models adjusted for age, sex, and conventional risk factors were used to assess the relative mortality hazard of individuals with CAC 1,000 compared with, first, a CAC reference of 0, and second, with patients with a CAC score of 400 to 999.

 

RESULTS - There were 2,869 patients with CAC 1,000 (86.3% male, mean 66.3 ± 9.7 years of age). Most patients with CAC 1,000 had 4-vessel CAC (mean: 3.5 ± 0.6 vessels) and had greater total CAC area, higher mean CAC density, and more extracoronary calcium (79% with thoracic artery calcium, 46% with aortic valve calcium, and 21% with mitral valve calcium) than those with CAC scores of 400 to 999. After full adjustment, those with CAC 1,000 had a 5.04- (95% confidence interval [CI]: 3.92 to 6.48), 6.79- (95% CI: 4.74 to 9.73), 1.55- (95% CI:1.23 to 1.95), and 2.89-fold (95% CI: 2.53 to 3.31) risk of CVD, CHD, cancer, and all-cause mortality, respectively, compared to those with CAC score of 0. The CAC 1,000 group had a 1.71- (95% CI: 1.41 to 2.08), 1.84- (95% CI: 1.43 to 2.36), 1.36- (95% CI:1.07 to 1.73), and 1.51-fold (95% CI: 1.33 to 1.70) increased risk of CVD, CHD, cancer, and all-cause mortality compared to those with CAC scores 400 to 999. Graphic analysis of CAC 1,000 patients revealed continued logarithmic increase in risk, with no clear evidence of a risk plateau.

 

CONCLUSIONS - Patients with extensive CAC (CAC 1,000) represent a unique very high-risk phenotype with mortality outcomes commensurate with high-risk secondary prevention patients. Future guidelines should consider CAC 1,000 patients to be a distinct risk group who may benefit from the most aggressive preventive therapy.