CBS 2019
CBSMD教育中心
English

科学研究

科研文章

荐读文献

10-Year Coronary Heart Disease Risk Prediction Using Coronary Artery Calcium and Traditional Risk Factors: Derivation in the MESA (Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis) With Validation in the HNR (Heinz Nixdorf Recall) Study and the DHS (Dallas Heart Study) Percutaneous Coronary Intervention Readmissions Where Are the Solutions? Translational Perspective on Epigenetics in Cardiovascular Disease Impact of Oxidative Stress on the Heart and Vasculature: Part 2 of a 3-Part Series Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection: JACC State-of-the-Art Review Coronary Artery Calcium Progression Is Associated With Coronary Plaque Volume Progression - Results From a Quantitative Semiautomated Coronary Artery Plaque Analysis Impact of Abnormal Coronary Reactivity on Long-Term Clinical Outcomes in Women New AHA/ACC/HRS Guidance on Sudden Cardiac Death Prevention Patient Characteristics Associated With Antianginal Medication Escalation and De-Escalation Following Chronic Total Occlusion Percutaneous Coronary Intervention: Insights From the OPEN CTO Registry 2017 AHA/ACC Clinical Performance and Quality Measures for Adults With ST-Elevation and Non–ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction: A Report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Performance Measures

Original Research2022 Jun 20;e13826.

JOURNAL:Eur J Clin Invest. Article Link

Prognostic implication of lipidomics in patients with coronary total occlusion undergoing PCI

Y Zhou, XD Wang, JY Qian et al. Keywords: biomarker; CTO; CAD; lipidomics; risk prediction

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND - Predictors of prognosis in patients with coronary chronic total occlusion (CTO) undergoing elective percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) have remained lacking. Lipidomic profiling enable researchers to associated lipid species with disease progression and may improve the prediction of cardiovascular events.


METHODS In the present study, 781 lipids were measured by targeted lipidomic profiling in 350 individuals (50 healthy controls, 50 patients with coronary artery disease and 250 patients with CTO). L1-regularized logistic regression was used to identify lipid species associated with adverse cardiovascular events and create predicting models which were verified by 10-fold cross-validation (200 repeats). Comparisons were made between a traditional model constructed with clinical characteristics alone and a combined model built with both lipidomic data and traditional factors.


RESULTS 24 lipid species were dysregulated exclusively in patients with CTO, most of which belonged to sphingomyelin (SM) and triacylglycerol (TAG). Compared with traditional risk factors, new model combining lipids and traditional factors had significantly improved performance in predicting adverse cardiovascular events in CTO patients after PCI (area under the curve, 0.870 vs. 0.726, p < 0.05; Akaike information criterion, 129 vs. 156; net reclassification improvement, 0.312, p < 0.001; integrated discrimination improvement, 0.244, p < 0.001). Nomogram was built based on the incorporated model and prove efficient by Kaplan-Meier method.


CONCLUSIONS - Lipidomic profiling revealed lipid species which may participated in the formation of CTO and could contribute to the risk stratification in CTO patients undergoing PCI.