1. BMI, Infarct Size, and Clinical Outcomes Following Primary PCI
- Author
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Björn Redfors, Fotis Gkargkoulas, Holger Thiele, Bahira Shahim, Akiko Maehara, Aaron Crowley, Ori Ben-Yehuda, Gregg W. Stone, Shmuel Chen, and Ingo Eitel
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Ejection fraction ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Overweight ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Heart failure ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Myocardial infarction ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Body mass index - Abstract
Objectives The aim of this study was to examine the association between body mass index (BMI), infarct size (IS) and clinical outcomes. Background The association between obesity, IS, and prognosis in patients undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention (pPCI) for ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction is incompletely understood. Methods An individual patient-data pooled analysis was performed from 6 randomized trials of patients undergoing pPCI for ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction in which IS (percentage left ventricular mass) was assessed within 1 month (median 4 days) after randomization using either cardiac magnetic resonance (5 studies) or 99mTc sestamibi single-photon emission computed tomography (1 study). Patients were classified as normal weight (BMI Results Among 2,238 patients undergoing pPCI, 644 (29%) were normal weight, 1,008 (45%) were overweight, and 586 (26%) were obese. BMI was not significantly associated with IS, microvascular obstruction, or left ventricular ejection fraction in adjusted or unadjusted analysis. BMI was also not associated with the 1-year composite risk for death or heart failure hospitalization (adjusted hazard ratio: 1.21 [95% confidence interval: 0.74 to 1.71] for overweight vs. normal [p = 0.59]; adjusted hazard ratio: 1.21 [95% confidence interval 0.74 to 1.97] for obese vs. normal [p = 0.45]) or for death or heart failure hospitalization separately. Results were consistent when BMI was modeled as a continuous variable. Conclusions In this individual patient-data pooled analysis of 2,238 patients undergoing pPCI for ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction, BMI was not associated with IS, microvascular obstruction, left ventricular ejection fraction, or 1-year rates of death or heart failure hospitalization.
- Published
- 2020