1. Long-term prognostic role of cerebrovascular disease and peripheral arterial disease across the spectrum of acute coronary syndromes.
- Author
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Vagnarelli F, Corsini A, Lorenzini M, Ortolani P, Norscini G, Cinti L, Semprini F, Nanni S, Taglieri N, Soflai Sohee S, Melandri G, Letizia Bacchi Reggiani M, and Rapezzi C
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Aged, Cerebrovascular Disorders complications, Electrocardiography, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Incidence, Italy epidemiology, Male, Peripheral Arterial Disease complications, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Acute Coronary Syndrome complications, Cerebrovascular Disorders epidemiology, Peripheral Arterial Disease epidemiology, Registries, Risk Assessment methods
- Abstract
Background: In acute coronary syndromes (ACS), the influence of cerebro-vascular disease (CVD) and/or peripheral artery disease (PAD) on short-midterm outcome has been well established. Data on long-term outcome however, are limited. Our study aimed to explore the effect of CVD and PAD on long-term outcome in a cohort of unselected ACS patients, including ST-elevation (STE-ACS) and non-ST-elevation (NSTE-ACS)., Methods and Results: The population consisted of 2046 consecutive patients with a confirmed final diagnosis of ACS; 896 (44%) had STE-ACS and 1150 (66%) NSTE-ACS. CVD alone was present in 98 patients (5%), 282 (14%) had PAD alone, and 30 (1.5%) had both. All cause mortality at 5 years was lowest in patients without CVD/PAD (33%), intermediate in patients with either CVD or PAD (62% and 63%, respectively) reaching 80% in those with both CVD and PAD. These findings were confirmed in the STE-ACS and NSTE-ACS subgroups. CVD and PAD remained independent predictors of mortality after multivariable analysis, the combined presence of both carrying the highest risk within each ACS type (HR 4.15, 95% CI 1.83-9.44 for STE-ACS; HR 2.14, 1.29-3.54 for NSTE-ACS). Patients with CVD and/or PAD were less likely to be treated invasively and received less evidence-based treatment at discharge., Conclusions: Across the spectrum of ACS, extracardiac vascular disease harbors a negative long-term prognosis that worsens progressively with the number of affected arterial beds., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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