44 results on '"Chlebus, K."'
Search Results
2. Vitamin K in patients with familial hypercholesterolemia
- Author
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Szupryczyńska, N., primary, Wojda, A., additional, Pajkowski, M., additional, Chlebus, K., additional, Gruchała, M., additional, and Kochan, Z., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Overview of the current status of familial hypercholesterolaemia care in over 60 countries - The EAS Familial Hypercholesterolaemia Studies Collaboration (FHSC)
- Author
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Vallejo-Vaz, A.J. Marco, M.D. Stevens, C.A.T. Akram, A. Freiberger, T. Hovingh, G.K. Kastelein, J.J.P. Mata, P. Raal, F.J. Santos, R.D. Soran, H. Watts, G.F. Abifadel, M. Aguilar-Salinas, C.A. Al-Khnifsawi, M. Alkindi, F.A. Alnouri, F. Alonso, R. Al-Rasadi, K. Al-Sarraf, A. Ashavaid, T.F. Binder, C.J. Bogsrud, M.P. Bourbon, M. Bruckert, E. Chlebus, K. Corral, P. Descamps, O. Durst, R. Ezhov, M. Fras, Z. Genest, J. Groselj, U. Harada-Shiba, M. Kayikcioglu, M. Lalic, K. Lam, C.S.P. Latkovskis, G. Laufs, U. Liberopoulos, E. Lin, J. Maher, V. Majano, N. Marais, A.D. März, W. Mirrakhimov, E. Miserez, A.R. Mitchenko, O. Nawawi, H.M. Nordestgaard, B.G. Paragh, G. Petrulioniene, Z. Pojskic, B. Postadzhiyan, A. Reda, A. Reiner, Ž. Sadoh, W.E. Sahebkar, A. Shehab, A. Shek, A.B. Stoll, M. Su, T.-C. Subramaniam, T. Susekov, A.V. Symeonides, P. Tilney, M. Tomlinson, B. Truong, T.-H. Tselepis, A.D. Tybjærg-Hansen, A. Vázquez-Cárdenas, A. Viigimaa, M. Vohnout, B. Widén, E. Yamashita, S. Banach, M. Gaita, D. Jiang, L. Nilsson, L. Santos, L.E. Schunkert, H. Tokgözoğlu, L. Car, J. Catapano, A.L. Ray, K.K. Schreier, L. Pang, J. Dieplinger, H. Hanauer-Mader, G. Desutter, J. Langlois, M. Mertens, A. Rietzschel, E. Wallemacq, C. Isakovic, D. Dzankovic, A.M. Obralija, J. Pojskic, L. Sisic, I. Stimjanin, E. Torlak, V.A. Jannes, C.E. Krieger, J.E. Pereira, A.C. Ruel, I. Asenjo, S. Cuevas, A. Pećin, I. Miltiadous, G. Panayiotou, A.G. Vrablik, M. Benn, M. Heinsar, S. Béliard, S. Gouni-Berthold, I. Hengstenberg, W. Julius, U. Kassner, U. Klose, G. König, C. König, W. Otte, B. Parhofer, K. Schatz, U. Schmidt, N. Steinhagen-Thiessen, E. Vogt, A. Antza, C. Athyros, V. Bilianou, E. Boufidou, A. Chrousos, G. Elisaf, M. Garoufi, A. Katsiki, N. Kolovou, G. Kotsis, V. Rallidis, L. Rizos, C. Skalidis, E. Skoumas, I. Tziomalos, K. Shawney, J.P.S. Abbaszadegan, M.R. Aminzadeh, M. Hosseini, S. Mobini, M. Vakili, R. Zaeri, H. Agar, R. Boran, G. Colwell, N. Crowley, V. Durkin, M. Griffin, D. Kelly, M. Rakovac-Tisdall, A. Bitzur, R. Cohen, H. Eliav, O. Ellis, A. Gavish, D. Harats, D. Henkin, Y. Knobler, H. Leavit, L. Leitersdorf, E. Schurr, D. Shpitzen, S. Szalat, A. Arca, M. Averna, M. Bertolini, S. Calandra, S. Tarugi, P. Erglis, A. Gilis, D. Nesterovics, G. Saripo, V. Upena-Roze, A. Elbitar, S. Jambart, S. Khoury, P.E. Gargalskaite, U. Kutkiene, S. Al-Khateeb, A. An, C.Y. Ismail, Z. Kasim, S. Ibrahim, K.S. Radzi, A.B.M. Kasim, N.A. Nor, N.S.M. Ramli, A.S. Razak, S.A. Muid, S. Rosman, A. Sanusi, A.R. Razman, A.Z. Nazli, S.A. Kek, T.L. Azzopardi, C. Aguilar Salinas, C.A. Galán, G. Rubinstein, A. Magaña-Torres, M.T. Martagon, A. Mehta, R. Wittekoek, M.E. Isara, A.R. Obaseki, D.E. Ohenhen, O.A. Holven, K.B. Gruchała, M. Baranowska, M. Borowiec-Wolny, J. Gilis-Malinowska, N. Michalska-Grzonkowska, A. Pajkowski, M. Parczewska, A. Romanowska-Kocejko, M. Stróżyk, A. Żarczyńska-Buchowiecka, M. Kleinschmidt, M. Alves, A.C. Medeiros, A.M. Ershova, A. Korneva, V. Kuznetsova, T. Malyshev, P. Meshkov, A. Rozhkova, T. Popovic, L. Lukac, S.S. Stosic, L. Rasulic, I. Lalic, N.M. Chua, T.S.J. Ting, S.P.L. Raslova, K. Battelino, T. Cevc, M. Jug, B. Kovac, J. Podkrajsek, K.T. Sustar, U. Trontelj, K.J. Marais, D. Isla, L.P. Martin, F.J. Charng, M.-J. Chen, P.-L. Kayikçioglu, M. Dell’oca, N. Fernández, G. Ressia, A. Reyes, X. Zelarayan, M. Alieva, R.B. Hoshimov, S.U. Nizamov, U.I. Kurbanov, R.D. Lima-Martínez, M.M. Nguyen, M.-N.T. Do, D.-L. Kim, N.-T. Le, T.-T. Le, H.-A.
- Abstract
Background and aims: Management of familial hypercholesterolaemia (FH) may vary across different settings due to factors related to population characteristics, practice, resources and/or policies. We conducted a survey among the worldwide network of EAS FHSC Lead Investigators to provide an overview of FH status in different countries. Methods: Lead Investigators from countries formally involved in the EAS FHSC by mid-May 2018 were invited to provide a brief report on FH status in their countries, including available information, programmes, initiatives, and management. Results: 63 countries provided reports. Data on FH prevalence are lacking in most countries. Where available, data tend to align with recent estimates, suggesting a higher frequency than that traditionally considered. Low rates of FH detection are reported across all regions. National registries and education programmes to improve FH awareness/knowledge are a recognised priority, but funding is often lacking. In most countries, diagnosis primarily relies on the Dutch Lipid Clinics Network criteria. Although available in many countries, genetic testing is not widely implemented (frequent cost issues). There are only a few national official government programmes for FH. Under-treatment is an issue. FH therapy is not universally reimbursed. PCSK9-inhibitors are available in ∼2/3 countries. Lipoprotein-apheresis is offered in ∼60% countries, although access is limited. Conclusions: FH is a recognised public health concern. Management varies widely across countries, with overall suboptimal identification and under-treatment. Efforts and initiatives to improve FH knowledge and management are underway, including development of national registries, but support, particularly from health authorities, and better funding are greatly needed. © 2018 Elsevier B.V.
- Published
- 2018
4. MON-PO636: Serum Vitamin B12 Levels in Patients with Familial Hypercholesterolemia
- Author
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Szupryczyńska, N., primary, Wojda, A., additional, Pajkowski, M., additional, Chlebus, K., additional, Gruchała, M., additional, and Kochan, Z., additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Prevalence of diabetes in Poland: a combined analysis of national databases
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Topor‐Madry, R., primary, Wojtyniak, B., additional, Strojek, K., additional, Rutkowski, D., additional, Bogusławski, S., additional, Ignaszewska‐Wyrzykowska, A., additional, Jarosz‐Chobot, P., additional, Czech, M., additional, Kozierkiewicz, A., additional, Chlebus, K., additional, Jędrzejczyk, T., additional, Mysliwiec, M., additional, Polanska, J., additional, Wysocki, M.J., additional, and Zdrojewski, T., additional
- Published
- 2019
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6. Molecular basis of familial hypercholesterolemia in Poland – update from the Polish national centre of diagnostics and treatment of familial hypercholesterolemia
- Author
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Chmara, M., primary, Zuk, M., additional, Mickiewicz, A., additional, Brandt, A., additional, Chlebus, K., additional, Kubalska, J., additional, Bautembach-Minkowska, J., additional, Stroniawska-Woźniak, M., additional, Bednarska-Makaruk, M., additional, Kłosiewicz-Latoszek, L., additional, Rynkiewicz, A., additional, Mysliwiec, M., additional, Gruchala, M., additional, Limon, J., additional, and Wasag, B., additional
- Published
- 2016
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7. Screening for heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia in Poland – The diagnostic cut-off points for clinical criteria and LDL-cholesterol, validated by age
- Author
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Wegrzyn, A., primary, Fijalkowski, M., additional, Chlebus, K., additional, Wasag, B., additional, Chmara, M., additional, Zuk, M., additional, Limon, J., additional, Rynkiewicz, A., additional, and Gruchala, M., additional
- Published
- 2015
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8. Diagnosis Relate Group in cardiac procedures – the experience of University Clinical Center in Poland
- Author
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Wojtecka, A, primary and Chlebus, K, additional
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- 2014
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9. Changes in prevalence of hyperlipidemia in GDANSK port workers during 7 years follow-up
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Bellwon, J, primary, Chlebus, K, additional, Zielinska, D, additional, Sobiczewski, W, additional, Gruchala, M, additional, and Rynkiewicz, A, additional
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- 2006
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10. Development of the metabolic syndrome in Northern Poland during 7 years of follow-up
- Author
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Bellwon, J, primary, Chlebus, K, additional, Sobiczewski, W, additional, Gruchala, M, additional, Ciecwierz, D, additional, and Rynkiewicz, A, additional
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- 2006
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11. Predictive value of new metabolic syndrome definition
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Bellwon, J, primary, Chlebus, K, additional, Sobiczewski, W, additional, Gruchala, M, additional, Ciecwierz, D, additional, and Rynkiewicz, A, additional
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- 2006
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12. Trends in lipids profile in Northern Poland during 7 years follow-up
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Bellwon, J, primary, Chlebus, K, additional, Zielinska, D, additional, Siebert, J, additional, Sobiczewski, W, additional, Gruchala, M, additional, and Rynkiewicz, A, additional
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- 2006
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13. We-P13:352 Predictive value of new metabolic syndrome definition
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Bellwon, J., primary, Chlebus, K., additional, Dworakowski, R., additional, Sobiczewski, W., additional, Ciecwierz, D., additional, Siebert, J., additional, and Rynkiewicz, A., additional
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- 2006
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14. Mo-P6:380 The evaluation of cardiovascular risk associated with multiple gene polymorphism during 7 year follow-up of the 691 cohort of healthy subjects
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Chlebus, K., primary, Bellwon, J., additional, Ochman, K., additional, Stopezynska, I., additional, Gruchala, M., additional, Curyllo, B., additional, Wasag, B., additional, Sobiezewski, W., additional, Limon, J., additional, and Rynkiewicz, A., additional
- Published
- 2006
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15. DIAGNOSIS OF ARTERIAL HYPERTENSION AND ECG LEFT VENTRICULAR HYPERTROPHY IN RELATION TO ANGIOTENSIN CONVERTING ENZYME GENE I/D POLYMORPHISM DURING 7 YEARS FOLLOW UP
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Bellwon, J., primary, Chlebus, K., additional, Sibert, J., additional, Wasag, B., additional, Ochman, K., additional, Gruchala, M., additional, Limon, J., additional, and Rynkiewicz, A., additional
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- 2004
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16. ANGIOTENSIN CONVERTING ENZYME GENE I/D POLYMORPHISM HAS SIGNIFICANT INFLUENCEON BLOOD PRESSURE CHANGE DURING 7 YEARS FOLLOW UP
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Bellwon, J., primary, Chlebus, K., additional, Siebert, J., additional, Wasag, B., additional, Ochman, K., additional, Gruchala, M., additional, Limon, J., additional, and Rynkiewicz, A., additional
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- 2004
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17. M.459 Changes of the lipid profile in Gdansk port workers: 7-years follow-up
- Author
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Bellwon, J., Chlebus, K., Siebert, J., Gruchala, M., and Rynkiewicz, A.
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- 2004
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18. Which patient with left ventricular ejection fraction=40% and when die during 3 years after discharge home from acute myocardial infarction analysis of joined PL-ACS and AMI-PL registries
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Gasior, M., Gierlotka, M., Wojtyniak, B., Wysocki, M., Hoffman, P., Opolski, G., Chlebus, K., Zembala, M., Polonski, L., and Tomasz Zdrojewski
19. Place of residence and its impact on time to invasive treatment and outcomes of patients with STEMI - analysis from the PL-ACS and AMI-PL registries
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Gierlotka, M., Wojtyniak, B., Dudek, D., Buszman, P., Legutko, J., Witkowski, A., Kawecki, D., Hoffman, P., Tomasz Zdrojewski, Chlebus, K., Opolski, G., Polonski, L., and Gasior, M.
20. Diurnal blood pressure profile after the first dose of perindopril in acute myocardial infarction in patients with a history of hypertension,Profil dobowy ciśnienia tȩtniczego po pierwszej dawce peryndoprylu u chorych w ostrej fazie zawału serca obcia̧żonych w wywiadzie nadciśnieniem tȩtniczym
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Sobiczewski, W., Koprowski, A., Dworakowski, R., Grzybowski, A., Chlebus, K., Curyłło, B., Fijałkowski, M., Puchalski, W., Mierzejewski, L., and Andrzej Rynkiewicz
21. Arterial hypertension and other atherosclerotic risk factors in patients referred for elective coronary angiography to confirm significant coronary artery stenosis,Nadciśnienie tȩtnicze i inne czynniki ryzyka miażdżycy u pacjentów poddanych elektywnej koronarografii potwierdzaja̧cej istotne zmiany w tȩtnicach wieńcowych
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Gruchała, M., Ciećwierz, D., Bellwon, J., Targoński, R., Dubaniewicz, W., Wojciech Sobiczewski, Nowak, A., Skarzyński, P., Chlebus, K., and Rynkiewicz, A.
22. Global perspective of familial hypercholesterolaemia: a cross-sectional study from the EAS Familial Hypercholesterolaemia Studies Collaboration (FHSC)
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Jie Lin, Snejana Tisheva, Ishwar C. Verma, Francesco Cipollone, Liam R. Brunham, Florentina Predica, Perla A.C. Gonzalez, Jocelyne Inamo, André R. Miserez, Belma Pojskic, Michel Farnier, Avishay Ellis, Katia Bonomo, Ibrahim Al-Zakwani, Maria Grazia Zenti, Humberto A. Lopez, Khairul Shafiq Ibrahim, Erkin M. Mirrakhimov, Alexey Meshkov, Jose P. de Moura, Muthukkaruppan Annamalai, Raul D. Santos, F. Paillard, Maria Del Ben, Jan Lacko, Miguel T. Rico, Ximena Reyes, Laura E.G. de Leon, Noor Shafina Mohd Nor, Ulrich Julius, Mohammed A. Batais, Dieter Böhm, Ta-Chen Su, Takuya Kobayashi, Magdalena Chmara, Marco Gebauer, Marcos M. Lima-Martínez, Ravshanbek D. Kurbanov, Daisaku Masuda, Amro El-Hadidy, Melanie Schüler, Francisco Fuentes, Florian J. Mayer, Helena Vaverkova, F. Ulrich Beil, Juraj Bujdak, Mario Stoll, Isabelle Ruel, Elena Dorn, Thomas M. Stulnig, Abubaker Elfatih, Rano B. Alieva, Jiri Vesely, Valérie Carreau, Cristina M. Sibaja, Sophie Béliard, Olivier Ziegler, Adriana Branchi, Daniel Schurr, G.B. John Mancini, Tai E. Shyong, Eric L.T. Siang, Mafalda Bourbon, Zerrin Yigit, Meral Kayıkçıoğlu, Jacques Genest, Wei Yu, Michal Vrablík, Shavkat U. Hoshimov, Dan Gaita, Antonio Pipolo, Ashraf H.A. AlQudaimi, Walter Speidl, Gianfranco Parati, Zaliha Ismail, Victoria M. Zubieta, René Valéro, Tomas Salek, Hana Halamkova, Gustavs Latkovskis, Nicole Allendorf-Ostwald, Agnes Perrin, Vladimir Soska, Anastasia Garoufi, Francisco Araujo, Nacu C. Portilla, Thomas Segiet, Charalambos Koumaras, Hila Knobler, Fatih Sivri, Hani Altaradi, Ivan Pećin, Long Jiang, Alexander Dressel, Marlena Woś, Jana Franekova, D. Agapakis, Quitéria Rato, Dirk J. Blom, Marcin A. Bartlomiejczyk, Krzysztof Dyrbuś, Maurizio Averna, Phivos Symeonides, Yung A. Chua, Asim Rana, András Nagy, Juan C.G. Cuellar, Alexander Jäkel, Maya Safarova, Neama Luqman, Amalia-Despoina Koutsogianni, Patrick Tounian, Jose A. Alvarez, Ada Cuevas, Corinna Richter, Sybil Charrieres, Vitaliy Zafiraki, Michalis Doumas, Angela Lux, Thanh Huong Truong, Elaine Chow, José Luis Díaz-Díaz, Jesus R.H. Almada, Sabine Füllgraf-Horst, Gustavo G. Retana, Claudio Borghi, Gianni Biolo, Ivajlo Tzvetkov, Patrícia Pais, Mehmet Akbulut, Kumiko Nagahama, Oner Ozdogan, Frank Leistikow, Jianxun He, Alexander R.M. Lyons, Poranee Ganokroj, Luis E.S. Mendia, Ann-Cathrin Koschker, Gabriela A.G. Ramirez, Dainus Gilis, Karin Balinth, José Ramiro Cruz, Paolo Calabrò, Alberico L. Catapano, Emmanouil Skalidis, Hamida Al-Barwani, Genovefa Kolovou, Carolyn S.P. Lam, Yoto Yotov, Yaacov Henkin, Gabriella Iannuzzo, Aimi Z. Razman, Alma B.M. Rodriguez, Hans Dieplinger, Darlington E. Obaseki, Ursulo J. Herrera, Arcangelo Iannuzzi, Christoph Säly, Elena Olmastroni, Francisco G. Padilla, S.A. Nazli, Ioanna Gouni-Berthold, Miriam Kozárová, Urh Groselj, Igor Shaposhnik, Lorenzo Iughetti, Nawal Rwaili, Cinthia E. Jannes, Andrea Bartuli, Mikhail Voevoda, Marat V. Ezhov, Yanyu Duan, Alper Sonmez, Mustafa Yenercag, Ariane Sultan, Natasza Gilis-Malinowska, Tavintharan Subramaniam, Mohamed Ashraf, Jing Pang, Kota Matsuki, Tao Jiang, Gerald Klose, Eduardo A.R. Rodriguez, Lucie Solcova, Riccardo Sarzani, Mahmoud Traina, Alejandra Vázquez Cárdenas, Gordon A. Francis, Adolat V. Ziyaeva, Ronen Durst, Maciej Banach, Francisco Silva, Heribert Schunkert, Børge G. Nordestgaard, Ziyou Liu, Ahmad Bakhtiar Md Radzi, Hana Rosolova, Andrea Bäßler, Abdulhalim Jamal Kinsara, Noël Peretti, Victor Gurevich, Margarita T. Tamayo, Abdullah Tuncez, Florian Höllerl, Ljubica Stosic, Jianguang Qi, Anja Kirschbaum, Jitendra P.S. Sawhney, Michael Scholl, Kausik K. Ray, Mohamed Bendary, Hapizah Nawawi, Adrienne Tarr, Barbora Nussbaumerova, B.C. Brice, Kurt Huber, Noor Alicezah Mohd Kasim, A. Rahman A. Jamal, Vaclava Palanova, Giacomo Biasucci, Pucong Ye, Eva Cubova, Roopa Mehta, Rüdiger Schweizer, Veronica Zampoleri, Jacek Jóźwiak, Alyaa Al-Khateeb, Jing Hong, Katarina Raslova, Kirsten B. Holven, Tatiana Rozkova, Reinhold Busch, Alexander Klabnik, Konrad Hein, Eloy A.Z. Carrillo, Robin Urbanek, Livia Pisciotta, Fatma Y. Coskun, Jose J.G. Garcia, Valerio Pecchioli, Azra D. Nalbantic, Weerapan Khovidhunkit, Jernej Kovac, Michaela Kadurova, Mohammed Al-Jarallah, Vita Saripo, Christos V. Rizos, Jie Peng, Ang L. Chua, Dorothee Deiss, Nor A.A. Murad, Aneta Stróżyk, See Kwok, Gökhan Alici, Gillian J. Pilcher, John J.P. Kastelein, Dmitry Duplyakov, Calin Lengher, Milena Budikova, C. Azzopardi, Christina Antza, Luis E.V. Arroyo, Khalid Al-Jumaily, Ahmad Al-Sarraf, Carlos A. Aguilar-Salinas, Erkayim Bektasheva, Arta Upena-RozeMicena, Qian Wang, Xumin Wang, Leah Leavit, Radzi Rahmat, Selim Topcu, Željko Reiner, Lorenzo Maroni, Matija Cevc, Elizabeth R. Cooremans, Masatsune Ogura, Tevfik Sabuncu, Ruy D Arjona Villicaña, Andrea Giaccari, Xuesong Fan, Auryan Szalat, Sanjaya Dissanayake, Etienne Khoury, Anja Vogt, Hermann Toplak, Alexis Baass, Isabel Palma, Gaelle Sablon, Dana A. Hay, Ya Yang, Margus Viigimaa, Erik S.G. Stroes, Dror Harats, Konstantin Krychtiuk, Zesen Liu, Aleksandra Parczewska, Yves Cottin, Yichen Qu, Mathilde Di-Fillipo, Agnieszka Konopka, Lamija Pojskic, Guadalupe J. Dominguez, Ahmet Temizhan, Roberto C. Chacon, Ibrahim E. Dural, Qiang Yong, G. Kees Hovingh, Kang Meng, Sandra Kutkiene, Julie Lemale, Reinhold Innerhofer, Alexandros D. Tselepis, Handrean Soran, Wolfgang König, Bassam Atallah, Olena Mitchenko, Jana Cepova, Eduardo M. Rodriguez, Ulrich Laufs, Norhidayah Rosman, Alena Lubasova, V. Durlach, Frederick J. Raal, Elyor Khodzhiboboev, Cristina Pederiva, Hui Yuan, Ashraf Reda, Fahad Alnouri, Konstantinos Tziomalos, Thanh T. Le, Jana Sirotiakova, Régis Hankard, Hector E.A. Cazares, Betsabel Rodriguez, Lenka Pavlickova, Assen Goudev, Julius Katzmann, Diana Boger, Wael Almahmeed, Katarina T. Podkrajsek, Sabina Zambon, Fahri Bayram, Nadia Citroni, Samir Rafla, Vincent Rigalleau, Aleksandr B. Shek, Hani Sabbour, Berenice G. Guzman, Shoshi Shpitzen, Eric Tarantino, Ahmed Bendary, Fedya Nikolov, Jean Bergeron, Stefan Kopf, Iva Rasulic, Gerald F. Watts, Muhammad I.A. Hafidz, Mehmet B. Yilmaz, Kathrin Biolik, Ira A. Haack, Robert A. Hegele, Sonia Dulong, Bartosz Wasąg, Osama Sanad, Susana Correia, Zhenjia Wang, Dana Biedermann, Christel König, Helena Podzimkova, Ihab Daoud, Mohammad Alghamdi, Dražen Perica, László Márk, Iosif Koutagiar, Volkan Dogan, Vladimir Blaha, Chandrashekhar K. Ponde, Katerina Valoskova, Amer A. Jabbar, Azhari Rosman, Sazzli Kasim, Mesut Demir, Ulugbek I. Nizamov, Aldo Ferreira-Hermosillo, Dilek Yesilbursa, Atef Elbahry, Arshad Abdulrasheed, Omer A. Elamin, Vasileios Athyros, Joanna Lewek, Gergely Nagy, Ursula Kassner, Jian Jiao, Klaus G. Parhofer, Charlotte Nzeyimana, Marcin Pajkowski, Stanislav Zemek, Jose J.C. Macías, Cornelius Müller, G. Sfikas, Leopoldo Pérez de Isla, Yulia Ragino, Fahad Al-Zadjali, Abdul Rais Sanusi, Anna Rita Roscini, Jean Ferrières, Selim Jambart, Jean Pierre Rabes, Laura Schreier, Hofit Cohen, Olivier S. Descamps, N. Lalic, Christine Stumpp, Antonio J. Vallejo-Vaz, Jutta Christmann, Manuela Casula, Mariko Harada-Shiba, Olga Lunegova, Ewa Starostecka, Nicolas D. Oca, Alain Carrié, Achilleas Attilakos, Savas Ozer, Andreea Dumitrescu, Jürgen Merke, Urte Aliosaitiene, Evangelos Liberopoulos, Manuel O. De los Rios Ibarra, Maria J. Virtuoso, Alessandro Lupi, Panagiotis Anagnostis, Ruth Agar, Dorota Ferrieres, George Liamis, José Eduardo Krieger, Mariann Harangi, Fouzia Sadiq, Francois Schiele, Saif Kamal, Mária Audikovszky, Peter Baumgartner, Marta Gazzotti, Daniel Gaudet, Ashanty F. Ortega, Marcin Gruchała, Philippe Moulin, Ljiljana Popovic, Luca Bonanni, E. Kiouri, Mika Hori, Chiara Trenti, Elena Repetti, Carlo Sabbà, Sophie Bernard, Alejandro R. Zazueta, Mirac Vural, Jesus R. Gonzalez, C. Stevens, Francesca Carubbi, Wenhui Wen, Sabri Demircan, Kanika I. Dharmayat, Anne Tybjærg-Hansen, Elizabete Terauda, Claudia Zemmrich, Alphonsus Isara, Fabiola L. Sobrevilla, Anell Hernandez Garcia, Ibrahim Sisic, Justin T. I-Shing, Yvonne Winhofer-Stöckl, Luya Wang, Manfred Mayer, Mohanad Al-ageedi, Judith Wiener, Mohammed Al-Kindi, Anis Safura Ramli, Yan Chen, Denis Angoulvant, Aytekin Oguz, K.H. Wolmarans, Claudio Ferri, Tomáš Freiberger, Lubomira Cermakova, Julieta D.M. Portano, Pierre Henri Ducluzeau, Katerina Vonaskova, Levent H. Can, Mario H.F. Andrade, György Paragh, C. Ebenbichler, Karina J.A. Rivera, Alia Khudari, Elisabeth Steinhagen-Thiessen, Ana C. Alves, Victoria Korneva, Sandra Singh, Georgia Anastasiou, Nur S. Hamzan, Massimo Federici, Lale Tokgozoglu, Hector G. Alcala, Oana Moldovan, Giuseppe Mandraffino, Swarup A.V. Shah, Lukas Burda, Ersel Onrat, Manuel de los Reyes Barrera Bustillo, Mirjana Radovic, Arman Postadzhiyan, Nien-Tzu Chang, Aylin Yildirir, Martin Mäser, Bruno Fink, Svetlana Mosteoru, Ulrike Schatz, Luis A.V. Talavera, Magdalena Dusejovska, Richard Ceska, Faisal A. Al-Allaf, T.F. Ashavaid, Gereon Böll, Sona Machacova, Gonzalo C. Vargas, Antonio Gallo, Elina Pantchechnikova, Lukas Tichy, Gersina Rega-Kaun, Moses Elisaf, Branislav Vohnout, Antonio Bossi, Suad Al-Mukhaini, Natasa Rajkovic, Ursa Sustar, Merih Kutlu, Mohamed Sobhy, Britta Otte, Ana M. Medeiros, Borut Jug, Patrick Couture, Rodrigo Alonso, Wolfgang Seeger, Guzal J. Abdullaeva, Ahmet Celik, Nasreen Al-Sayed, Béla Benczúr, Petra E. Khoury, Rafezah Razali, Ma L.R. Osorio, Ruiying Zhang, Monica M.N. Usme, Humberto Garcia Aguilar, Ceyhun Ceyhan, Antje Spens, Christoph J. Binder, Volker Schrader, Terrance C.S. Jin, Neftali E.A. Villa, Aleksandra Michalska-Grzonkowska, Francesco Purrello, Marshima M. Rosli, Vincent Maher, Dilshad Rasul, Ines Colaço, Ornella Guardamagna, Giuliana Mombelli, Khalid F. AlHabib, Fahmi Alkaf, Marianne Benn, Youmna Ghaleb, Arsenio V. Vazquez, Lakshmi L. Reddy, Salih Kilic, Siti Hamimah Sheikh Abdul Kadir, E. Bilianou, Rossella Marcucci, Sandro Muntoni, Kurt Widhalm, Evangelos A. Zacharis, Kuznetsova T. Yu, Eric Bruckert, Antonia Sonntag, Katerina Rehouskova, Josè Pablo Werba, Leobardo Sauque-Reyna, Myra Tilney, Dov Gavishv, A.M. Fiorenza, Zdenka Krejsova, Hong A. Le, Andrey V. Susekov, Isabel Klein, Mai N.T. Nguyen, Andrejs Erglis, Muge Ildizli, Diane Brisson, Salmi Razali, Winfried März, Ovidio Muñiz-Grijalvo, Justyna Borowiec-Wolna, Ingrid Buganova, Ngoc T. Kim, Yue Wu, István Reiber, Jose C.A. Martinez, Pavel Malina, Sandy Elbitar, Stephan Matthias, Ali F. Abdalsahib, Zlatko Fras, Wilson E Sadoh, Lucas Kleemann, Tayfun Sahin, Martin P. Bogsrud, Fabio Pellegatta, Mohamed A. Shafy, Yuntao Li, Martine Paquette, Zuhier Awan, Arturo Pujia, Xiantao Song, Renata Cifkova, Alexandre C. Pereira, Ioannis Skoumas, Roman Cibulka, Tadej Battelino, Mariusz Gąsior, Ghada Kazamel, Lahore S.U. Shah, Eran Leitersdorf, Niki Katsiki, Daniel Elías-López, Khalid Al-Rasadi, Grete Talviste, Sarka Mala, Rocio M. Alvarado, Pavel Kraml, Gerret Paulsen, Angelina Passaro, Zsolt Karányi, Carine Ayoub, Vera Adamkova, Ivo Petrov, Turky H. Almigbal, Rohana Abdul Ghani, Franck Boccara, Brian W. McCrindle, François Martin, Jamshed J. Dalal, Shitong Cheng, Khalid Al-Waili, Chaoyi Zhang, Ramon M. Prado, Lubica Cibickova, Lubomira Fabryova, Tobias Wiesner, Thuhairah Hasrah Abdul Rahman, Tan J. Le, Marcello Arca, Sabine Scholl-Bürgi, Juan R. Saucedo, Georgijs Nesterovics, Carla V.M. Valencia, Alexander Stadelmann, Vasileios Kotsis, Lina Badimon, Shizuya Yamashita, Jose C.M. Oyervides, Lay K. Teh, Susanne Greber-Platzer, Marianne Abifadel, Ruta Meiere, Wibke Reinhard, Pablo Corral, Nina Schmidt, Alain Pradignac, A. David Marais, Marta Jordanova, Marzena Romanowska-Kocejko, Johannes Scholl, Brian Tomlinson, Laura G.G. Herrera, Loukianos S. Rallidis, Pedro Mata, Sameh Emil, Matej Mlinaric, Emile Ferrari, Suraya Abdul Razak, Alexandra Ershova, Andrie G. Panayiotou, Alinna Y.R. Garcia, Kairat Davletov, Katarina Lalic, Doan L. Do, Krzysztof Chlebus, Ricardo A. Carrera, Daniel I.P. Vazquez, Nikolaos Sakkas, Liyuan Xu, Mays Altaey, Aysa Hacioglu, Alexandro J. Martagon, Marta Żarczyńska-Buchowiecka, Michael Schömig, Jürgen Homberger, Andrea Benso, Bertrand Cariou, Ardon Rubinstein, Omer Gedikli, Emre Durakoglugil, Mei Chong, Bahadir Kirilmaz, Suhaila Abd Muid, Jose M. Salgado, Berenice P. Aparicio, Mutaz Alkhnifsawi, Bruno Vergès, Cécile Yelnik, Goreti Lobarinhas, Zaneta Petrulioniene, Sylvia Asenjo, Aytul B. Yildirim, László Bajnok, Vallejo-Vaz A.J., Stevens C.A.T., Lyons A.R.M., Dharmayat K.I., Freiberger T., Hovingh G.K., Mata P., Raal F.J., Santos R.D., Soran H., Watts G.F., Abifadel M., Aguilar-Salinas C.A., Alhabib K.F., Alkhnifsawi M., Almahmeed W., Alnouri F., Alonso R., Al-Rasadi K., Al-Sarraf A., Al-Sayed N., Araujo F., Ashavaid T.F., Banach M., Beliard S., Benn M., Binder C.J., Bogsrud M.P., Bourbon M., Chlebus K., Corral P., Davletov K., Descamps O.S., Durst R., Ezhov M., Gaita D., Genest J., Groselj U., Harada-Shiba M., Holven K.B., Kayikcioglu M., Khovidhunkit W., Lalic K., Latkovskis G., Laufs U., Liberopoulos E., Lima-Martinez M.M., Lin J., Maher V., Marais A.D., Marz W., Mirrakhimov E., Miserez A.R., Mitchenko O., Nawawi H., Nordestgaard B.G., Panayiotou A.G., Paragh G., Petrulioniene Z., Pojskic B., Postadzhiyan A., Raslova K., Reda A., Reiner, Sadiq F., Sadoh W.E., Schunkert H., Shek A.B., Stoll M., Stroes E., Su T.-C., Subramaniam T., Susekov A.V., Tilney M., Tomlinson 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Jiao J., Wu Y., Wen W., Xu L., Zhang R., Qu Y., He J., Fan X., Wang Z., Chow E., Pecin I., Perica D., Symeonides P., Vrablik M., Ceska R., Soska V., Tichy L., Adamkova V., Franekova J., Cifkova R., Kraml P., Vonaskova K., Cepova J., Dusejovska M., Pavlickova L., Blaha V., Rosolova H., Nussbaumerova B., Cibulka R., Vaverkova H., Cibickova L., Krejsova Z., Rehouskova K., Malina P., Budikova M., Palanova V., Solcova L., Lubasova A., Podzimkova H., Bujdak J., Vesely J., Jordanova M., Salek T., Urbanek R., Zemek S., Lacko J., Halamkova H., Machacova S., Mala S., Cubova E., Valoskova K., Burda L., Bendary A., Daoud I., Emil S., Elbahry A., Rafla S., Sanad O., Kazamel G., Ashraf M., Sobhy M., El-Hadidy A., Shafy M.A., Kamal S., Bendary M., Talviste G., Angoulvant D., Boccara F., Cariou B., Carreau V., Carrie A., Charrieres S., Cottin Y., Di-Fillipo M., Ducluzeau P.H., Dulong S., Durlach V., Farnier M., Ferrari E., Ferrieres D., Ferrieres J., Gallo A., hankard R., Inamo J., Lemale J., Moulin P., Paillard F., Peretti N., Perrin A., Pradignac A., Rabes J.P., Rigalleau V., Sultan A., Schiele F., Tounian P., Valero R., Verges B., Yelnik C., Ziegler O., Haack I.A., Schmidt N., Dressel A., Klein I., Christmann J., Sonntag A., Stumpp C., Boger D., Biedermann D., Usme M.M.N., Beil F.U., Klose G., Konig C., Gouni-Berthold I., Otte B., Boll G., Kirschbaum A., Merke J., Scholl J., Segiet T., Gebauer M., Predica F., Mayer M., Leistikow F., Fullgraf-Horst S., Muller C., Schuler M., Wiener J., Hein K., Baumgartner P., Kopf S., Busch R., Schomig M., Matthias S., Allendorf-Ostwald N., Fink B., Bohm D., Jakel A., Koschker A.-C., Schweizer R., Vogt A., Parhofer K., Konig W., Reinhard W., Bassler A., Stadelmann A., Schrader V., Katzmann J., Tarr A., Steinhagen-Thiessen E., Kassner U., Paulsen G., Homberger J., Zemmrich C., Seeger W., Biolik K., Deiss D., Richter C., Pantchechnikova E., Dorn E., Schatz U., Julius U., Spens A., Wiesner T., Scholl M., Rizos C.V., Sakkas N., Elisaf M., Skoumas I., Tziomalos K., Rallidis L., Kotsis V., Doumas M., Athyros V., Skalidis E., Kolovou G., Garoufi A., Bilianou E., Koutagiar I., Agapakis D., Kiouri E., Antza C., Katsiki N., Zacharis E., Attilakos A., Sfikas G., Koumaras C., Anagnostis P., Anastasiou G., Liamis G., Koutsogianni A.-D., Karanyi Z., Harangi M., Bajnok L., Audikovszky M., Mark L., Benczur B., Reiber I., Nagy G., Nagy A., Reddy L.L., Shah S.A.V., Ponde C.K., Dalal J.J., Sawhney J.P.S., Verma I.C., Altaey M., Al-Jumaily K., Rasul D., Abdalsahib A.F., Jabbar A.A., Al-ageedi M., Agar R., Cohen H., Ellis A., Gavishv D., Harats D., Henkin Y., Knobler H., Leavit L., Leitersdorf E., Rubinstein A., Schurr D., Shpitzen S., Szalat A., Casula M., Zampoleri V., Gazzotti M., Olmastroni E., Sarzani R., Ferri C., Repetti E., Sabba C., Bossi A.C., Borghi C., Muntoni S., Cipollone F., Purrello F., Pujia A., Passaro A., Marcucci R., Pecchioli V., Pisciotta L., Mandraffino G., Pellegatta F., Mombelli G., Branchi A., Fiorenza A.M., Pederiva 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B., Stoll, M., Stroes, E., Su, T. -C., Subramaniam, T., Susekov, A. V., Tilney, M., Tomlinson, B., Truong, T. H., Tselepis, A. D., Tybjaerg-Hansen, A., Vazquez Cardenas, A., Viigimaa, M., Wang, L., Yamashita, S., Kastelein, J. J. P., Bruckert, E., Vohnout, B., Schreier, L., Pang, J., Ebenbichler, C., Dieplinger, H., Innerhofer, R., Winhofer-Stockl, Y., Greber-Platzer, S., Krychtiuk, K., Speidl, W., Toplak, H., Widhalm, K., Stulnig, T., Huber, K., Hollerl, F., Rega-Kaun, G., Kleemann, L., Maser, M., Scholl-Burgi, S., Saly, C., Mayer, F. J., Sablon, G., Tarantino, E., Nzeyimana, C., Pojskic, L., Sisic, I., Nalbantic, A. D., Jannes, C. E., Pereira, A. C., Krieger, J. E., Petrov, I., Goudev, A., Nikolov, F., Tisheva, S., Yotov, Y., Tzvetkov, I., Baass, A., Bergeron, J., Bernard, S., Brisson, D., Brunham, L. R., Cermakova, L., Couture, P., Francis, G. A., Gaudet, D., Hegele, R. A., Khoury, E., Mancini, G. B. J., Mccrindle, B. W., Paquette, M., Ruel, I., Cuevas, A., Asenjo, S., Wang, X., Meng, K., Song, X., Yong, Q., Jiang, T., Liu, Z., Duan, Y., Hong, J., Ye, P., Chen, Y., Qi, J., Li, Y., Zhang, C., Peng, J., Yang, Y., Yu, W., Wang, Q., Yuan, H., Cheng, S., Jiang, L., Chong, M., Jiao, J., Wu, Y., Wen, W., Xu, L., Zhang, R., Qu, Y., He, J., Fan, X., Wang, Z., Chow, E., Pecin, I., Perica, D., Symeonides, P., Vrablik, M., Ceska, R., Soska, V., Tichy, L., Adamkova, V., Franekova, J., Cifkova, R., Kraml, P., Vonaskova, K., Cepova, J., Dusejovska, M., Pavlickova, L., Blaha, V., Rosolova, H., Nussbaumerova, B., Cibulka, R., Vaverkova, H., Cibickova, L., Krejsova, Z., Rehouskova, K., Malina, P., Budikova, M., Palanova, V., Solcova, L., Lubasova, A., Podzimkova, H., Bujdak, J., Vesely, J., Jordanova, M., Salek, T., Urbanek, R., Zemek, S., Lacko, J., Halamkova, H., Machacova, S., Mala, S., Cubova, E., Valoskova, K., Burda, L., Bendary, A., Daoud, I., Emil, S., Elbahry, A., Rafla, S., Sanad, O., Kazamel, G., Ashraf, M., Sobhy, M., El-Hadidy, A., Shafy, M. A., Kamal, S., Bendary, M., Talviste, G., Angoulvant, D., Boccara, F., Cariou, B., Carreau, V., Carrie, A., Charrieres, S., Cottin, Y., Di-Fillipo, M., Ducluzeau, P. H., Dulong, S., Durlach, V., Farnier, M., Ferrari, E., Ferrieres, D., Ferrieres, J., Gallo, A., Hankard, R., Inamo, J., Lemale, J., Moulin, P., Paillard, F., Peretti, N., Perrin, A., Pradignac, A., Rabes, J. P., Rigalleau, V., Sultan, A., Schiele, F., Tounian, P., Valero, R., Verges, B., Yelnik, C., Ziegler, O., Haack, I. A., Schmidt, N., Dressel, A., Klein, I., Christmann, J., Sonntag, A., Stumpp, C., Boger, D., Biedermann, D., Usme, M. M. N., Beil, F. U., Klose, G., Konig, C., Gouni-Berthold, I., Otte, B., Boll, G., Kirschbaum, A., Merke, J., Scholl, J., Segiet, T., Gebauer, M., Predica, F., Mayer, M., Leistikow, F., Fullgraf-Horst, S., Muller, C., Schuler, M., Wiener, J., Hein, K., Baumgartner, P., Kopf, S., Busch, R., Schomig, M., Matthias, S., Allendorf-Ostwald, N., Fink, B., Bohm, D., Jakel, A., Koschker, A. -C., Schweizer, R., Vogt, A., Parhofer, K., Konig, W., Reinhard, W., Bassler, A., Stadelmann, A., Schrader, V., Katzmann, J., Tarr, A., Steinhagen-Thiessen, E., Kassner, U., Paulsen, G., Homberger, J., Zemmrich, C., Seeger, W., Biolik, K., Deiss, D., Richter, C., Pantchechnikova, E., Dorn, E., Schatz, U., Julius, U., Spens, A., Wiesner, T., Scholl, M., Rizos, C. V., Sakkas, N., Elisaf, M., Skoumas, I., Tziomalos, K., Rallidis, L., Kotsis, V., Doumas, M., Athyros, V., Skalidis, E., Kolovou, G., Garoufi, A., Bilianou, E., Koutagiar, I., Agapakis, D., Kiouri, E., Antza, C., Katsiki, N., Zacharis, E., Attilakos, A., Sfikas, G., Koumaras, C., Anagnostis, P., Anastasiou, G., Liamis, G., Koutsogianni, A. -D., Karanyi, Z., Harangi, M., Bajnok, L., Audikovszky, M., Mark, L., Benczur, B., Reiber, I., Nagy, G., Nagy, A., Reddy, L. L., Shah, S. A. V., Ponde, C. K., Dalal, J. J., Sawhney, J. P. S., Verma, I. C., Altaey, M., Al-Jumaily, K., Rasul, D., Abdalsahib, A. F., Jabbar, A. A., Al-ageedi, M., Agar, R., Cohen, H., Ellis, A., Gavishv, D., Harats, D., Henkin, Y., Knobler, H., Leavit, L., Leitersdorf, E., Rubinstein, A., Schurr, D., Shpitzen, S., Szalat, A., Casula, M., Zampoleri, V., Gazzotti, M., Olmastroni, E., Sarzani, R., Ferri, C., Repetti, E., Sabba, C., Bossi, A. C., Borghi, C., Muntoni, S., Cipollone, F., Purrello, F., Pujia, A., Passaro, A., Marcucci, R., Pecchioli, V., Pisciotta, L., Mandraffino, G., Pellegatta, F., Mombelli, G., Branchi, A., Fiorenza, A. M., Pederiva, C., Werba, J. P., Parati, G., Carubbi, F., Iughetti, L., Iannuzzi, A., Iannuzzo, G., Calabro, P., Averna, M., Biasucci, G., Zambon, S., Roscini, A. R., Trenti, C., Arca, M., Federici, M., Del Ben, M., Bartuli, A., Giaccari, A., Pipolo, A., Citroni, N., Guardamagna, O., Bonomo, K., Benso, A., Biolo, G., Maroni, L., Lupi, A., Bonanni, L., Zenti, M. G., Matsuki, K., Hori, M., Ogura, M., Masuda, D., Kobayashi, T., Nagahama, K., Al-Jarallah, M., Radovic, M., Lunegova, O., Bektasheva, E., Khodzhiboboev, E., Erglis, A., Gilis, D., Nesterovics, G., Saripo, V., Meiere, R., Upena-RozeMicena, A., Terauda, E., Jambart, S., Khoury, P. E., Elbitar, S., Ayoub, C., Ghaleb, Y., Aliosaitiene, U., Kutkiene, S., Kasim, N. A. M., Nor, N. S. M., Ramli, A. S., Razak, S. A., Al-Khateeb, A., Kadir, S. H. S. A., Muid, S. A., Rahman, T. A., Kasim, S. S., Radzi, A. B. M., Ibrahim, K. S., Razali, S., Ismail, Z., Ghani, R. A., Hafidz, M. I. A., Chua, A. L., Rosli, M. M., Annamalai, M., Teh, L. K., Razali, R., Chua, Y. A., Rosman, A., Sanusi, A. R., Murad, N. A. A., Jamal, A. R. A., Nazli, S. A., Razman, A. Z., Rosman, N., Rahmat, R., Hamzan, N. S., Azzopardi, C., Mehta, R., Martagon, A. J., Ramirez, G. A. G., Villa, N. E. A., Vazquez, A. V., Elias-Lopez, D., Retana, G. G., Rodriguez, B., Macias, J. J. C., Zazueta, A. R., Alvarado, R. M., Portano, J. D. M., Lopez, H. A., Sauque-Reyna, L., Herrera, L. G. G., Mendia, L. E. S., Aguilar, H. G., Cooremans, E. R., Aparicio, B. P., Zubieta, V. M., Gonzalez, P. A. C., Ferreira-Hermosillo, A., Portilla, N. C., Dominguez, G. J., Garcia, A. Y. R., Cazares, H. E. A., Gonzalez, J. R., Valencia, C. V. M., Padilla, F. G., Prado, R. M., De los Rios Ibarra, M. O., Villicana, R. D. A., Rivera, K. J. A., Carrera, R. A., Alvarez, J. A., Martinez, J. C. A., de los Reyes Barrera Bustillo, M., Vargas, G. C., Chacon, R. C., Andrade, M. H. F., Ortega, A. F., Alcala, H. G., de Leon, L. E. G., Guzman, B. G., Garcia, J. J. G., Cuellar, J. C. G., Cruz, J. R. G., Garcia, A. H., Almada, J. R. H., Herrera, U. J., Sobrevilla, F. L., Rodriguez, E. M., Sibaja, C. M., Rodriguez, A. B. M., Oyervides, J. C. M., Vazquez, D. I. P., Rodriguez, E. A. R., Osorio, M. L. R., Saucedo, J. R., Tamayo, M. T., Talavera, L. A. V., Arroyo, L. E. V., Carrillo, E. A. Z., Isara, A., Obaseki, D. E., Al-Waili, K., Al-Zadjali, F., Al-Zakwani, I., Al-Kindi, M., Al-Mukhaini, S., Al-Barwani, H., Rana, A., Shah, L. S. U., Starostecka, E., Konopka, A., Lewek, J., Bartlomiejczyk, M., Gasior, M., Dyrbus, K., Jozwiak, J., Gruchala, M., Pajkowski, M., Romanowska-Kocejko, M., Zarczynska-Buchowiecka, M., Chmara, M., Wasag, B., Parczewska, A., Gilis-Malinowska, N., Borowiec-Wolna, J., Strozyk, A., Wos, M., Michalska-Grzonkowska, A., Medeiros, A. M., Alves, A. C., Silva, F., Lobarinhas, G., Palma, I., de Moura, J. P., Rico, M. T., Rato, Q., Pais, P., Correia, S., Moldovan, O., Virtuoso, M. J., Salgado, J. M., Colaco, I., Dumitrescu, A., Lengher, C., Mosteoru, S., Meshkov, A., Ershova, A., Rozkova, T., Korneva, V., Yu, K. T., Zafiraki, V., Voevoda, M., Gurevich, V., Duplyakov, D., Ragino, Y., Safarova, M., Shaposhnik, I., Alkaf, F., Khudari, A., Rwaili, N., Al-Allaf, F., Alghamdi, M., Batais, M. A., Almigbal, T. H., Kinsara, A., Alqudaimi, A. H. A., Awan, Z., Elamin, O. A., Altaradi, H., Rajkovic, N., Popovic, L., Singh, S., Stosic, L., Rasulic, I., Lalic, N. M., Lam, C., Le, T. J., Siang, E. L. T., Dissanayake, S., I-Shing, J. T., Shyong, T. E., Jin, T. C. S., Balinth, K., Buganova, I., Fabryova, L., Kadurova, M., Klabnik, A., Kozarova, M., Sirotiakova, J., Battelino, T., Kovac, J., Mlinaric, M., Sustar, U., Podkrajsek, K. T., Fras, Z., Jug, B., Cevc, M., Pilcher, G. J., Blom, D. J., Wolmarans, K. H., Brice, B. C., Muniz-Grijalvo, O., Diaz-Diaz, J. L., de Isla, L. P., Fuentes, F., Badimon, L., Martin, F., Lux, A., Chang, N. -T., Ganokroj, P., Akbulut, M., Alici, G., Bayram, F., Can, L. H., Celik, A., Ceyhan, C., Coskun, F. Y., Demir, M., Demircan, S., Dogan, V., Durakoglugil, E., Dural, I. E., Gedikli, O., Hacioglu, A., Ildizli, M., Kilic, S., Kirilmaz, B., Kutlu, M., Oguz, A., Ozdogan, O., Onrat, E., Ozer, S., Sabuncu, T., Sahin, T., Sivri, F., Sonmez, A., Temizhan, A., Topcu, S., Tuncez, A., Vural, M., Yenercag, M., Yesilbursa, D., Yigit, Z., Yildirim, A. B., Yildirir, A., Yilmaz, M. B., Atallah, B., Traina, M., Sabbour, H., Hay, D. A., Luqman, N., Elfatih, A., Abdulrasheed, A., Kwok, S., Oca, N. D., Reyes, X., Alieva, R. B., Kurbanov, R. D., Hoshimov, S. U., Nizamov, U. I., Ziyaeva, A. V., Abdullaeva, G. J., Do, D. L., Nguyen, M. N. T., Kim, N. T., Le, T. T., Le, H. A., Tokgozoglu, L., Catapano, A. L., Ray, K. K., and EAS Familial Hypercholesterolaemia Studies Collaboration (FHSC), Borghi C
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Male ,Settore MED/09 - Medicina Interna ,Arterial disease ,Cross-sectional study ,Adult population ,Coronary Disease ,Disease ,Global Health ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Doenças Cardio e Cérebro-vasculares ,Anticholesteremic Agent ,Monoclonal ,Prevalence ,Registries ,Familial Hypercholesterolemia ,Humanized ,Stroke ,11 Medical and Health Sciences ,LS2_9 ,Studies Collaboration ,Anticholesteremic Agents ,General Medicine ,Heart Disease Risk Factor ,Middle Aged ,FHSC global registry data ,Europe ,Treatment Outcome ,Lower prevalence ,Guidance ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Female ,Proprotein Convertase 9 ,Familial hypercholesterolaemia ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Human ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Combination therapy ,FHSC global registry, heterozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia ,Cardiovascular risk factors ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Insights ,Antibodies ,NO ,Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II ,Clinician ,Medicine, General & Internal ,Internal medicine ,General & Internal Medicine ,Health Sciences ,medicine ,Humans ,EAS Familial Hypercholesterolaemia Studies Collaboration (FHSC) ,Cross-Sectional Studie ,Science & Technology ,Global Perspective ,business.industry ,Cholesterol, LDL ,medicine.disease ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Heart Disease Risk Factors ,Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitor ,Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors ,business - Abstract
Background The European Atherosclerosis Society Familial Hypercholesterolaemia Studies Collaboration (FHSC) global registry provides a platform for the global surveillance of familial hypercholesterolaemia through harmonisation and pooling of multinational data. In this study, we aimed to characterise the adult population with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia and described how it is detected and managed globally. Methods Using FHSC global registry data, we did a cross-sectional assessment of adults (aged 18 years or older) with a clinical or genetic diagnosis of probable or definite heterozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia at the time they were entered into the registries. Data were assessed overall and by WHO regions, sex, and index versus non-index cases. Findings Of the 61 612 individuals in the registry, 42 167 adults (21 999 [53.6%] women) from 56 countries were included in the study. Of these, 31 798 (75.4%) were diagnosed with the Dutch Lipid Clinic Network criteria, and 35 490 (84.2%) were from the WHO region of Europe. Median age of participants at entry in the registry was 46.2 years (IQR 34.3-58.0); median age at diagnosis of familial hypercholesterolaemia was 44.4 years (32.5-56.5), with 40.2% of participants younger than 40 years when diagnosed. Prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors increased progressively with age and varied by WHO region. Prevalence of coronary disease was 17.4% (2.1% for stroke and 5.2% for peripheral artery disease), increasing with concentrations of untreated LDL cholesterol, and was about two times lower in women than in men. Among patients receiving lipid-lowering medications, 16 803 (81.1%) were receiving statins and 3691 (21.2%) were on combination therapy, with greater use of more potent lipid-lowering medication in men than in women. Median LDL cholesterol was 5.43 mmol/L (IQR 4.32-6.72) among patients not taking lipid-lowering medications and 4.23 mmol/L (3.20-5.66) among those taking them. Among patients taking lipid-lowering medications, 2.7% had LDL cholesterol lower than 1.8 mmol/L; the use of combination therapy, particularly with three drugs and with proprotein convertase subtilisin-kexin type 9 inhibitors, was associated with a higher proportion and greater odds of having LDL cholesterol lower than 1.8 mmol/L. Compared with index cases, patients who were non-index cases were younger, with lower LDL cholesterol and lower prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors and cardiovascular diseases (all p, Pfizer Independent Grant for Learning Change [16157823]; Amgen; Merck Sharp Dohme; Sanofi-Aventis; Daiichi Sankyo; Regeneron; National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Imperial Biomedical Research Centre, UK; NIHR; Czech Ministry of Health [NU20-02-00261]; Canadian Institutes of Health Research; Austrian Heart Foundation; Tyrolean Regional Government; Gulf Heart Association, The EAS FHSC is an academic initiative that has received funding from a Pfizer Independent Grant for Learning & Change 2014 (16157823) and from investigator-initiated research grants to the European Atherosclerosis Society-Imperial College London from Amgen, Merck Sharp & Dohme, Sanofi-Aventis, Daiichi Sankyo, and Regeneron. KKR acknowledges support from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Imperial Biomedical Research Centre, UK. KID acknowledges support from a PhD Studentship from NIHR under the Applied Health Research programme for Northwest London, UK (the views expressed in this publication are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the National Health Service, the NIHR, or the Department of Health). TF was supported by a grant from the Czech Ministry of Health (NU20-02-00261). JG receives support from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. The Austrian Familial Hypercholesterolaemia registry has been supported by funds from the Austrian Heart Foundation and the Tyrolean Regional Government. The Gulf Familial Hypercholesterolaemia registry was done under the auspices of the Gulf Heart Association.
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- 2021
23. Worldwide experience of homozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia:retrospective cohort study
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Tycho R Tromp, Merel L Hartgers, G Kees Hovingh, Antonio J Vallejo-Vaz, Kausik K Ray, Handrean Soran, Tomas Freiberger, Stefano Bertolini, Mariko Harada-Shiba, Dirk J Blom, Frederick J Raal, Marina Cuchel, Tycho R. Tromp, Merel L. Hartgers, G. Kees Hovingh, Antonio J. Vallejo-Vaz, Kausik K. Ray, Stefano A. Bertolini, Jing Pang, Gerald F. Watts, Susanne Greber-Platzer, Martin Mäser, Thomas M. Stulnig, Christoph F. Ebenbichler, Khalid Bin Thani, David Cassiman, Olivier S. Descamps, Daisy Rymen, Peter Witters, Raul D. Santos, Liam R. Brunham, Gordon A. Francis, Jacques Genest, Robert A. Hegele, Brooke A. Kennedy, Isabelle Ruel, Mark H. Sherman, Long Jiang, Luya Wang, Željko Reiner, Vladimir Blaha, Richard Ceska, Jana Dvorakova, Lubomir Dlouhy, Pavel Horak, Vladimir Soska, Lukas Tichy, Robin Urbanek, Helena Vaverkova, Michal Vrablik, Stanislav Zemek, Lukas Zlatohlavek, Sameh Emil, Tarek Naguib, Ashraf Reda, Sophie Béliard, Eric Bruckert, Antonio Gallo, Moses S. Elisaf, Genovefa Kolovou, Hofit Cohen, Ronen Durst, Eldad J. Dann, Avishay Elis, Osama Hussein, Eran Leitersdorf, Daniel Schurr, Nitika Setia, Ishwar C. Verma, Mohammed D. Alareedh, Mutaz Al-Khnifsawi, Ali F. Abdalsahib Al-Zamili, Sabah H. Rhadi, Foaad K. Shaghee, Marcello Arca, Maurizio Averna, Andrea Bartuli, Marco Bucci, Paola S. Buonuomo, Paolo Calabrò, Sebastiano Calandra, Manuela Casula, Alberico L. Catapano, Angelo B. Cefalù, Arrigo F.G. Cicero, Sergio D'Addato, Laura D'Erasmo, Alessia Di Costanzo, Tommaso Fasano, Marta Gazzotti, Antonina Giammanco, Gabriella Iannuzzo, Anastasia Ibba, Emanuele A. Negri, Andrea Pasta, Chiara Pavanello, Livia Pisciotta, Claudio Rabacchi, Carlo Ripoli, Tiziana Sampietro, Francesco Sbrana, Fulvio Sileo, Patrizia Suppressa, Patrizia Tarugi, Chiara Trenti, Maria G. Zenti, Mika Hori, Mahmoud H. Ayesh, Sami T. Azar, Fadi F. Bitar, Akl C. Fahed, Elie M. Moubarak, Georges Nemer, Hapizah M. Nawawi, Ramón Madriz, Roopa Mehta, Arjen J. Cupido, Joep C. Defesche, M. Doortje Reijman, Jeanine E. Roeters-van Lennep, Erik S.G. Stroes, Albert Wiegman, Linda Zuurbier, Khalid Al-Waili, Fouzia Sadiq, Krzysztof Chlebus, Mafalda Bourbon, Isabel M. Gaspar, Katarina S. Lalic, Marat V. Ezhov, Andrey V. Susekov, Urh Groselj, Min-Ji Charng, Weerapan Khovidhunkit, Melih Aktan, Bulent B. Altunkeser, Sinan Demircioglu, Melis Kose, Cumali Gokce, Osman Ilhan, Meral Kayikcioglu, Leyla G. Kaynar, Irfan Kuku, Erdal Kurtoglu, Harika Okutan, Osman I. Ozcebe, Zafer Pekkolay, Saim Sag, Osman Z. Salcioglu, Ahmet Temizhan, Mustafa Yenercag, Mehmet Yilmaz, Hamiyet Yilmaz Yasar, Olena Mitchenko, Alexander R.M. Lyons, Christophe A.T. Stevens, Julie A. Brothers, Lisa C. Hudgins, Christina Nguyen, Rano Alieva, Aleksandr Shek, Doan-Loi Do, Ngoc-Thanh Kim, Hong-An Le, Thanh-Tung Le, Mai-Ngoc T. Nguyen, Thanh-Huong Truong, Dirk J. Blom, Frederick J. Raal, VU University medical center, Tromp T.R., Hartgers M.L., Hovingh G.K., Vallejo-Vaz A.J., Ray K.K., Soran H., Freiberger T., Bertolini S., Harada-Shiba M., Blom D.J., Raal F.J., Cuchel M., Bertolini S.A., Pang J., Watts G.F., Greber-Platzer S., Maser M., Stulnig T.M., Ebenbichler C.F., Bin Thani K., Cassiman D., Descamps O.S., Rymen D., Witters P., Santos R.D., Brunham L.R., Francis G.A., Genest J., Hegele R.A., Kennedy B.A., Ruel I., Sherman M.H., Jiang L., Wang L., Reiner Z., Blaha V., Ceska R., Dvorakova J., Dlouhy L., Horak P., Soska V., Tichy L., Urbanek R., Vaverkova H., Vrablik M., Zemek S., Zlatohlavek L., Emil S., Naguib T., Reda A., Beliard S., Bruckert E., Gallo A., Elisaf M.S., Kolovou G., Cohen H., Durst R., Dann E.J., Elis A., Hussein O., Leitersdorf E., Schurr D., Setia N., Verma I.C., Alareedh M.D., Al-Khnifsawi M., Abdalsahib Al-Zamili A.F., Rhadi S.H., Shaghee F.K., Arca M., Averna M., Bartuli A., Bucci M., Buonuomo P.S., Calabro P., Calandra S., Casula M., Catapano A.L., Cefalu A.B., Cicero A.F.G., D'Addato S., D'Erasmo L., Di Costanzo A., Fasano T., Gazzotti M., Giammanco A., Iannuzzo G., Ibba A., Negri E.A., Pasta A., Pavanello C., Pisciotta L., Rabacchi C., Ripoli C., Sampietro T., Sbrana F., Sileo F., Suppressa P., Tarugi P., Trenti C., Zenti M.G., Hori M., Ayesh M.H., Azar S.T., Bitar F.F., Fahed A.C., Moubarak E.M., Nemer G., Nawawi H.M., Madriz R., Mehta R., Cupido A.J., Defesche J.C., Reijman M.D., Roeters-van Lennep J.E., Stroes E.S.G., Wiegman A., Zuurbier L., Al-Waili K., Sadiq F., Chlebus K., Bourbon M., Gaspar I.M., Lalic K.S., Ezhov M.V., Susekov A.V., Groselj U., Charng M.-J., Khovidhunkit W., Aktan M., Altunkeser B.B., Demircioglu S., Kose M., Gokce C., Ilhan O., Kayikcioglu M., Kaynar L.G., Kuku I., Kurtoglu E., Okutan H., Ozcebe O.I., Pekkolay Z., Sag S., Salcioglu O.Z., Temizhan A., Yenercag M., Yilmaz M., Yilmaz Yasar H., Mitchenko O., Lyons A.R.M., Stevens C.A.T., Brothers J.A., Hudgins L.C., Nguyen C., Alieva R., Shek A., Do D.-L., Kim N.-T., Le H.-A., Le T.-T., Nguyen M.-N.T., Truong T.-H., University of Amsterdam, University of Pennsylvania, European Atherosclerosis Society, Experimental Vascular Medicine, Graduate School, Vascular Medicine, ACS - Atherosclerosis & ischemic syndromes, Human Genetics, Paediatric Metabolic Diseases, ACS - Diabetes & metabolism, AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, ACS - Heart failure & arrhythmias, R Tromp, Tycho, L Hartgers, Merel, Kees Hovingh, G, J Vallejo-Vaz, Antonio, K Ray, Kausik, Soran, Handrean, Freiberger, Toma, A Bertolini, Stefano, Harada-Shiba, Mariko, Pang, Jing, F Watts, Gerald, Greber-Platzer, Susanne, Mäser, Martin, M Stulnig, Thoma, F Ebenbichler, Christoph, Bin Thani, Khalid, Cassiman, David, S Descamps, Olivier, Rymen, Daisy, Witters, Peter, D Santos, Raul, R Brunham, Liam, A Francis, Gordon, Genest, Jacque, A Hegele, Robert, A Kennedy, Brooke, Ruel, Isabelle, H Sherman, Mark, Jiang, Long, Wang, Luya, Reiner, Željko, Blaha, Vladimir, Ceska, Richard, Dvorakova, Jana, Dlouhy, Lubomir, Horak, Pavel, Soska, Vladimir, Tichy, Luka, Urbanek, Robin, Vaverkova, Helena, Vrablik, Michal, Zemek, Stanislav, Zlatohlavek, Luka, Emil, Sameh, Naguib, Tarek, Reda, Ashraf, Béliard, Sophie, Bruckert, Eric, Gallo, Antonio, S Elisaf, Mose, Kolovou, Genovefa, Cohen, Hofit, Durst, Ronen, J Dann, Eldad, Elis, Avishay, Hussein, Osama, Leitersdorf, Eran, Schurr, Daniel, Setia, Nitika, C Verma, Ishwar, D Alareedh, Mohammed, Al-Khnifsawi, Mutaz, F Abdalsahib Al-Zamili, Ali, H Rhadi, Sabah, K Shaghee, Foaad, Arca, Marcello, Averna, Maurizio, Bartuli, Andrea, Bucci, Marco, S Buonuomo, Paola, Calabrò, Paolo, Calandra, Sebastiano, Casula, Manuela, L Catapano, Alberico, B Cefalù, Angelo, G Cicero, Arrigo F, D'Addato, Sergio, D'Erasmo, Laura, Di Costanzo, Alessia, Fasano, Tommaso, Gazzotti, Marta, Giammanco, Antonina, Iannuzzo, Gabriella, Ibba, Anastasia, A Negri, Emanuele, Pasta, Andrea, Pavanello, Chiara, Pisciotta, Livia, Rabacchi, Claudio, Ripoli, Carlo, Sampietro, Tiziana, Sbrana, Francesco, Sileo, Fulvio, Suppressa, Patrizia, Tarugi, Patrizia, Trenti, Chiara, G Zenti, Maria, Hori, Mika, H Ayesh, Mahmoud, T Azar, Sami, F Bitar, Fadi, C Fahed, Akl, M Moubarak, Elie, Nemer, George, M Nawawi, Hapizah, Madriz, Ramón, Mehta, Roopa, J Cupido, Arjen, C Defesche, Joep, Doortje Reijman, M, E Roeters-van Lennep, Jeanine, G Stroes, Erik S, Wiegman, Albert, Zuurbier, Linda, Al-Waili, Khalid, Sadiq, Fouzia, Chlebus, Krzysztof, Bourbon, Mafalda, M Gaspar, Isabel, S Lalic, Katarina, V Ezhov, Marat, V Susekov, Andrey, Groselj, Urh, Charng, Min-Ji, Khovidhunkit, Weerapan, Aktan, Melih, B Altunkeser, Bulent, Demircioglu, Sinan, Kose, Meli, Gokce, Cumali, Ilhan, Osman, Kayikcioglu, Meral, G Kaynar, Leyla, Kuku, Irfan, Kurtoglu, Erdal, Okutan, Harika, I Ozcebe, Osman, Pekkolay, Zafer, Sag, Saim, Z Salcioglu, Osman, Temizhan, Ahmet, Yenercag, Mustafa, Yilmaz, Mehmet, Yilmaz Yasar, Hamiyet, Mitchenko, Olena, M Lyons, Alexander R, T Stevens, Christophe A, A Brothers, Julie, C Hudgins, Lisa, Nguyen, Christina, Alieva, Rano, Shek, Aleksandr, Do, Doan-Loi, Kim, Ngoc-Thanh, Le, Hong-An, Le, Thanh-Tung, T Nguyen, Mai-Ngoc, Truong, Thanh-Huong, J Blom, Dirk, J Raal, Frederick, and Cuchel, Marina
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Adult ,Male ,Homozygous Familial Hypercholesterolemia ,Adolescent ,retrospective study ,CHILDREN ,Doenças Cardio e Cérebro-vasculares ,Cohort Studies ,Young Adult ,Medicine, General & Internal ,General & Internal Medicine ,Cardiovascular Disease ,Humans ,Registries ,LIPOPROTEIN-APHERESIS ,Child ,11 Medical and Health Sciences ,Retrospective Studies ,Homozygous Familial Hypercholesterolaemia International Clinical Collaborators ,Science & Technology ,GUIDANCE ,clinical characteristic ,EVOLOCUMAB ,Homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia ,Worldwide ,Therapies ,Cardiovascular disease ,General Medicine ,CARE ,OPEN-LABEL ,EFFICACY ,INSIGHTS ,Child, Preschool ,outcome ,Female ,genetic ,Familial Hypercholesterolaemia ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Abstract
[Background]: Homozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia (HoFH) is a rare inherited disorder resulting in extremely elevated low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels and premature atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD). Current guidance about its management and prognosis stems from small studies, mostly from high-income countries. The objective of this study was to assess the clinical and genetic characteristics, as well as the impact, of current practice on health outcomes of HoFH patients globally., [Methods]: The HoFH International Clinical Collaborators registry collected data on patients with a clinical, or genetic, or both, diagnosis of HoFH using a retrospective cohort study design. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04815005., [Findings]: Overall, 751 patients from 38 countries were included, with 565 (75%) reporting biallelic pathogenic variants. The median age of diagnosis was 12∙0 years (IQR 5∙5–27∙0) years. Of the 751 patients, 389 (52%) were female and 362 (48%) were male. Race was reported for 527 patients; 338 (64%) patients were White, 121 (23%) were Asian, and 68 (13%) were Black or mixed race. The major manifestations of ASCVD or aortic stenosis were already present in 65 (9%) of patients at diagnosis of HoFH. Globally, pretreatment LDL cholesterol levels were 14∙7 mmol/L (IQR 11∙6–18∙4). Among patients with detailed therapeutic information, 491 (92%) of 534 received statins, 342 (64%) of 534 received ezetimibe, and 243 (39%) of 621 received lipoprotein apheresis. On-treatment LDL cholesterol levels were lower in high-income countries (3∙93 mmol/L, IQR 2∙6–5∙8) versus non-highincome countries (9∙3 mmol/L, 6∙7–12∙7), with greater use of three or more lipid-lowering therapies (LLT; highincome 66% vs non-high-income 24%) and consequently more patients attaining guideline-recommended LDL cholesterol goals (high-income 21% vs non-high-income 3%). A first major adverse cardiovascular event occurred a decade earlier in non-high-income countries, at a median age of 24∙5 years (IQR 17∙0–34∙5) versus 37∙0 years (29∙0–49∙0) in high-income countries (adjusted hazard ratio 1∙64, 95% CI 1∙13–2∙38)., [Interpretation]: Worldwide, patients with HoFH are diagnosed too late, undertreated, and at high premature ASCVD risk. Greater use of multi-LLT regimens is associated with lower LDL cholesterol levels and better outcomes. Significant global disparities exist in treatment regimens, control of LDL cholesterol levels, and cardiovascular event-free survival, which demands a critical re-evaluation of global health policy to reduce inequalities and improve outcomes for all patients with HoFH., Amsterdam University Medical Centers, Location Academic Medical Center; Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania; and European Atherosclerosis Society
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- 2022
24. Prevalence of hypercholesterolemia in the elderly and the very elderly members of the Polish population: results of a national cross-sectional representative survey.
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Chlebus K, Zdrojewski T, Jagiełło K, Mossakowska M, Chudek J, Więcek A, and Grodzicki T
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Introduction: Lipid disorders are the most common cardiovascular risk factor among adult population in Poland. However, there is still insufficient epidemiological data for an ever-growing group of older people., Objectives: The aim was to describe and analyze the epidemiology of lipid disorders among Polish seniors Patients and methods: The random sample of 4101 participants (M = 2136; W = 1965) aged 65-104, equally distributed in age subgroups (65-69, 70-74, 75-79, 80-84, 85-89, and 90(+)-year-old subjects), participated in a cross-sectional, national survey PolSenior. Anthropometric measurements, blood pressure, and blood samples for tests of lipid profile were obtained., Results: 62.4% of Polish seniors (56.1% of men and 66.3% of women) suffered from hypercholesterolemia. TC level was the highest among 65-69-year-olds, both men (206.0 [201.0-210.9] mg/dL) and women (220.6 [215.6-225.6] mg/dL). Women in each age group had a higher TC concentration than men. Also, in terms of LDL-C, the highest level was found in women aged 65-69 years (131.6 [127.2-136.1] mg/dL) and decreased in older age groups to 120.1 [115.2-125.0] mg/dL in women >90 years of age; similar in men: 121.6 [117.3-125.9] mg/dL in 65-69 y. o. and 106.5 [102.5-110.5] mg/dL in the group over 90 years old. In all the respective age groups, LDL-C was higher in women., Conclusions: In the Polish population among the elderly mean serum TC and LDL-C concentrations are higher in women than in men. The results obtained highlight the importance of lipid disorders as a risk factor also among the elderly Poles.
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- 2024
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25. Sex Differences in Diagnosis, Treatment, and Cardiovascular Outcomes in Homozygous Familial Hypercholesterolemia.
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Mulder JWCM, Tromp TR, Al-Khnifsawi M, Blom DJ, Chlebus K, Cuchel M, D'Erasmo L, Gallo A, Hovingh GK, Kim NT, Long J, Raal FJ, Schonck WAM, Soran H, Truong TH, Boersma E, and Roeters van Lennep JE
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adolescent, Cholesterol, LDL, Cohort Studies, Retrospective Studies, Sex Characteristics, Homozygous Familial Hypercholesterolemia, Atherosclerosis, Myocardial Infarction
- Abstract
Importance: Homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia (HoFH) is a rare genetic condition characterized by extremely increased low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol levels and premature atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD). Heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia (HeFH) is more common than HoFH, and women with HeFH are diagnosed later and undertreated compared to men; it is unknown whether these sex differences also apply to HoFH., Objective: To investigate sex differences in age at diagnosis, risk factors, lipid-lowering treatment, and ASCVD morbidity and mortality in patients with HoFH., Design, Setting, and Participants: Sex-specific analyses for this retrospective cohort study were performed using data from the HoFH International Clinical Collaborators (HICC) registry, the largest global dataset of patients with HoFH, spanning 88 institutions across 38 countries. Patients with HoFH who were alive during or after 2010 were eligible for inclusion. Data entry occurred between February 2016 and December 2020. Data were analyzed from June 2022 to June 2023., Main Outcomes and Measures: Comparison between women and men with HoFH regarding age at diagnosis, presence of risk factors, lipid-lowering treatment, prevalence, and onset and incidence of ASCVD morbidity (myocardial infarction [MI], aortic stenosis, and combined ASCVD outcomes) and mortality., Results: Data from 389 women and 362 men with HoFH from 38 countries were included. Women and men had similar age at diagnosis (median [IQR], 13 [6-26] years vs 11 [5-27] years, respectively), untreated LDL cholesterol levels (mean [SD], 579 [203] vs 596 [186] mg/dL, respectively), and cardiovascular risk factor prevalence, except smoking (38 of 266 women [14.3%] vs 59 of 217 men [27.2%], respectively). Prevalence of MI was lower in women (31 of 389 [8.0%]) than men (59 of 362 [16.3%]), but age at first MI was similar (mean [SD], 39 [13] years in women vs 38 [13] years in men). Treated LDL cholesterol levels and lipid-lowering therapy were similar in both sexes, in particular statins (248 of 276 women [89.9%] vs 235 of 258 men [91.1%]) and lipoprotein apheresis (115 of 317 women [36.3%] vs 118 of 304 men [38.8%]). Sixteen years after HoFH diagnosis, women had statistically significant lower cumulative incidence of MI (5.0% in women vs 13.7% in men; subdistribution hazard ratio [SHR], 0.37; 95% CI, 0.21-0.66) and nonsignificantly lower all-cause mortality (3.0% in women vs 4.1% in men; HR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.40-1.45) and cardiovascular mortality (2.6% in women vs 4.1% in men; SHR, 0.87; 95% CI, 0.44-1.75)., Conclusions and Relevance: In this cohort study of individuals with known HoFH, MI was higher in men compared with women yet age at diagnosis and at first ASCVD event were similar. These findings suggest that early diagnosis and treatment are important in attenuating the excessive cardiovascular risk in both sexes.
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- 2024
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26. Recommendations of the Experts of the Polish Cardiac Society (PCS) and the Polish Lipid Association (PoLA) on the diagnosis and management of elevated lipoprotein(a) levels.
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Sosnowska B, Stepinska J, Mitkowski P, Bielecka-Dabrowa A, Bobrowska B, Budzianowski J, Burchardt P, Chlebus K, Dobrowolski P, Gasior M, Jankowski P, Kubica J, Mickiewicz A, Mysliwiec M, Osadnik T, Prejbisz A, Rajtar-Salwa R, Wita K, Witkowski A, Gil R, and Banach M
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Lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] is made up of a low-density lipoprotein (LDL) particle and a specific apolipoprotein(a). The blood concentration of Lp(a) is approximately 90% genetically determined, and the main genetic factor determining Lp(a) levels is the size of the apo(a) isoform, which is determined by the number of KIV2 domain repeats. The size of the apo(a) isoform is inversely proportional to the blood concentration of Lp(a). Lp(a) is a strong and independent cardiovascular risk factor. Elevated Lp(a) levels ≥ 50 mg/dl (≥ 125 nmol/l) are estimated to occur in more than 1.5 billion people worldwide. However, determination of Lp(a) levels is performed far too rarely, including Poland, where, in fact, it is only since the 2021 guidelines of the Polish Lipid Association (PoLA) and five other scientific societies that Lp(a) measurements have begun to be performed. Determination of Lp(a) concentrations is not easy due to, among other things, the different sizes of the apo(a) isoforms; however, the currently available certified tests make it possible to distinguish between people with low and high cardiovascular risk with a high degree of precision. In 2022, the first guidelines for the management of patients with elevated lipoprotein(a) levels were published by the European Atherosclerosis Society (EAS) and the American Heart Association (AHA). The first Polish guidelines are the result of the work of experts from the two scientific societies and their aim is to provide clear, practical recommendations for the determination and management of elevated Lp(a) levels., Competing Interests: Przemysław Mitkowski – remuneration for lectures/advisory panels from Novartis, Sanofi, Amgen; Agata Bielecka-Dąbrowa – remuneration for lectures from Novartis; Beata Bobrowska – collaborated as consultant and received remuneration for lectures from Amgen, Exceed Orphan, Novartis, Polpharma, Sanofi; Pawel Burchardt – remuneration for lectures from Amgen, Novartis, Sanofi, Sandoz, Teva; Piotr Dobrowolski – remuneration for lectures/advisory panels from: Amgen, Sanofi, Novartis; Piotr Jankowski – remuneration for lectures from: Amgen, Novartis, Sanofi; Jacek Kubica – remuneration for lectures from: Amgen, Novartis, Sanofi; Agnieszka Mickiewicz – remuneration for lectures from Novartis, Amgen, Sanofi, Fresenius Medical Care; Aleksander Prejbisz – participation in a clinical trial funded by Amgen; Renata Rajtar-Salwa – consultant/remuneration for lectures from Amgen, Sanofi, Novartis, Exceed Orphan, Polfarma; Adam Witkowski – advisory panels and remuneration for lectures form Novartis and Sanofi; Robert Gil – remuneration from lectures from Novartis, Amgen, Sanofi; Maciej Banach – remuneration for lectures from Adamed, Amgen, Daiichi Sankyo, Exceed Orphan, KRKA, Polpharma, Mylan/Viatris, Novartis, Novo-Nordisk, Pfizer, Sanofi, Teva, Zentiva; participation in advisory panels for Adamed, Amgen, Daiichi Sankyo, Esperion, NewAmsterdam, Novartis, Novo-Nordisk, Sanofi; grants from: Amgen, Daiichi Sankyo, Mylan/Viatris, Sanofi; other authors reported no conflict of interest., (Copyright: © 2024 Termedia & Banach.)
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- 2024
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27. Concordance/discordance between serum apolipoprotein B, low density lipoprotein cholesterol and non-high density lipoprotein cholesterol in NATPOL 2011 participants - An epidemiological perspective.
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Solnica B, Sniderman AD, Wyszomirski A, Rutkowski M, Chlebus K, Bandosz P, Pencina MJ, and Zdrojewski T
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- Male, Humans, Female, Cholesterol, LDL, Apolipoproteins B, Cholesterol, HDL, Metabolic Syndrome diagnosis, Metabolic Syndrome epidemiology, Cardiovascular Diseases, Atherosclerosis
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Background: The study compared the distribution of serum LDL-C, non-HDL-C, and apolipoprotein B (apoB) among participants of the NATPOL 2011 survey and analysed concordance/discordance of results in the context of the risk for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD)., Methods: Serum levels of apoB, LDL-C, non-HDL-C and small dense LDL-C were measured/calculated in 2067-2098 survey participants. The results were compared between women and men, age groups and in relation to body mass index (BMI), fasting glucose and TG levels, and the presence of CVD. Percentile distribution of lipid levels and concordance/discordance analysis were based on medians and ESC/EAS 2019 target thresholds for ASCVD risk and on comparison of measured apoB levels and levels calculated from linear regression equations with serum LDL- C and non-HDL-C as independent variables., Results: Serum apoB, LDL-C and non-HDL-C were similarly related to sex, age, BMI, visceral obesity, cardiovascular disease, and fasting glucose and triglyceride levels. Serum apoB, LDL-C and non-HDL-C very high- and moderate- target thresholds were exceeded in 83%, 99% and 96.9% and in 41%, 75% and 63.7% of subjects, respectively. The incidence of the discordances between the results depended on the dividing values used and ranged from 0.2% to 45.2% of the respondents. Subjects with high apoB / low LDL-C/non-HDL-C discordance had features of metabolic syndrome., Conclusions: Diagnostic discordances between apoB and LDL-C/non-HDL-C indicate limitations of serum LDL-C/non-HDL-C in ASCVD risk management. Due to the high apoB/low LDL-C/non-HDL-C discordance, obese/metabolic syndrome patients may benefit from replacing LDL-C/non-HDL-C by apoB in ASCVD risk assessment and lipid-lowering therapy., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest None declared., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2023
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28. Metabolic syndrome - a new definition and management guidelines: A joint position paper by the Polish Society of Hypertension, Polish Society for the Treatment of Obesity, Polish Lipid Association, Polish Association for Study of Liver, Polish Society of Family Medicine, Polish Society of Lifestyle Medicine, Division of Prevention and Epidemiology Polish Cardiac Society, "Club 30" Polish Cardiac Society, and Division of Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Society of Polish Surgeons.
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Dobrowolski P, Prejbisz A, Kuryłowicz A, Baska A, Burchardt P, Chlebus K, Dzida G, Jankowski P, Jaroszewicz J, Jaworski P, Kamiński K, Kapłon-Cieślicka A, Klocek M, Kukla M, Mamcarz A, Mastalerz-Migas A, Narkiewicz K, Ostrowska L, Śliż D, Tarnowski W, Wolf J, Wyleżoł M, Zdrojewski T, Banach M, Januszewicz A, and Bogdański P
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- 2022
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29. Effectiveness and safety of PCSK9 inhibitor therapy in patients with familial hypercholesterolemia within a therapeutic program in Poland: Preliminary multicenter data.
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Chlebus K, Cybulska B, Dobrowolski P, Romanowska-Kocejko M, Żarczyńska-Buchowiecka M, Gilis-Malinowska N, Stróżyk A, Borowiec-Wolna J, Pajkowski M, Bobrowska B, Rajtar-Salwa R, Kwapiszewska A, Waluś-Miarka M, Chmara M, Gałąska R, Małecki M, Zdrojewski T, and Gruchała M
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- Adult, Antibodies, Monoclonal adverse effects, Cholesterol, LDL, Humans, PCSK9 Inhibitors, Poland, Treatment Outcome, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II diagnosis, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II drug therapy, Proprotein Convertase 9
- Abstract
Background: In Poland, treatment with proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) inhibitors has become available free of charge in a therapeutic program. Assessed herein, is the efficacy and safety of alirocumab and evolocumab in patients with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia (FH)., Methods: Data of 55 adult FH patients who participated in the program were analyzed upon meeting the criteria established by the Ministry of Health (low density lipoprotein cholesterol [LDL-C] above 160 mg/dL on max. tolerated statin dose and ezetimib). The efficacy of PCSK9 inhibitors in reducing LDL-C with drug administration every 2 weeks was assessed after 3 months and 1 year of therapy. A safety profile evaluation was performed at each visit. 48 patients completed the 3-month and 21 for the 1-year observation periods (34 patients treated with alirokumab and 14 with evolocumab)., Results: The mean concentration of direct-measured LDL-C decreased from the initial level of 215.1 ± 74.5 mg/dL to 75.3 ± 64.1 mg/dL, i.e., by 65 ± 14% following 3 months of treatment. This effect was stable in 1-year observation (77.7 ± 72.8 mg/dL). Adverse effects were flu-like symptoms (13.0%), injection site reactions (11.1%), fatigue (5.6%) and musculoskeletal symptoms (5.6%). Seven patients failed to complete the 3-month treatment period due to side effects or non-compliance, and 1 patient failed to complete the 1-year treatment due to myalgia., Conclusions: This study confirmed high effectiveness of PCSK9 inhibitors in reducing LDL-C levels in patients with FH. Due to restrictive inclusion criteria with LDL-C threshold level > 160 mg/dL (> 4.1 mmol/L) required for participation in the therapeutic program, a relatively small number of FH patients were eligible for treatment.
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- 2022
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30. PoLA/CFPiP/PCS/PSLD/PSD/PSH guidelines on diagnosis and therapy of lipid disorders in Poland 2021.
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Banach M, Burchardt P, Chlebus K, Dobrowolski P, Dudek D, Dyrbuś K, Gąsior M, Jankowski P, Jóźwiak J, Kłosiewicz-Latoszek L, Kowalska I, Małecki M, Prejbisz A, Rakowski M, Rysz J, Solnica B, Sitkiewicz D, Sygitowicz G, Sypniewska G, Tomasik T, Windak A, Zozulińska-Ziółkiewicz D, and Cybulska B
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Maciej Banach has received grant/research support from Amgen, Sanofi, Mylan/Viatris, and has worked as a consultant/received lecture fees from: Amgen, Daichii Sankyo, Esperion, Freia Pharmaceuticals, Herbapol, Kogen, KRKA, Mylan/Viatris, Novo Nordisk, Novartis, Polfarmex, Polpharma, Sanofi, Teva, Zentiva; works as CMO in Nomi Biotech Corporation Ltd.; Dariusz Dudek has received honoraria and grant/research support from: Amgen, Astra Zeneca, Cardinal Health, Gedeon Richter, Sanofi Piotr Jankowski has received honoraria and research grants from: Amgen, Sanofi, Novartis, Servier, Zentiva; Jacek Jóźwiak has received grant/research support from Valeant and has worked as a consultant/received lectures from: Amgen, Boehringer Ingelheim, Teva, Zentiva, Celgene, Servier, Bioton, ALAB; works as ADMO in Synexus; Irina Kowalska worked as consultant/received lecture fees from: Ascensia Diabetes Care, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk, Sanofi; Bogdan Solnica has received lecture fees from Abbott Laboratories Poland, Argenta, Beckman Coulter, Euroimmun, Roche Diagnostics, Siemens Healthcare; Tomasz Tomasik declares cooperation with Boehringer Ingelheim, Novartis, Shire, Biofarm, Eli Lilly, and AstraZeneca; Dorota Zozulińska-Ziółkiewicz has received grant/research support from Novo Nordisk and worked as a consultant/received lecture fees from: Abbott, Astra Zeneca, Bioton, Boehringer Ingelheim, Dexcom, Eli Lilly, Medtronic, Mundipharma, Novo Nordisk, Roche, Sanofi, Zentiva; other experts report no conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2021
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31. Assessment of microvascular function and pharmacological regulation in genetically confirmed familial hypercholesterolemia.
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Pajkowski M, Dudziak M, Chlebus K, and Hellmann M
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- Adult, Biomarkers blood, Case-Control Studies, Cholesterol, LDL blood, Female, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Humans, Hyperemia physiopathology, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II blood, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II genetics, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II physiopathology, Male, Microvessels physiopathology, Middle Aged, Phenotype, Treatment Outcome, Cholesterol blood, Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II drug therapy, Microcirculation drug effects, Microvessels drug effects, Skin blood supply
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Background: Familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) is a genetic lipid disorder leading to accelerated atherosclerosis, premature cardiovascular disease and death. Microvascular endothelial dysfunction is one of the earliest vascular pathology manifestations and may precede symptomatic atherosclerosis., Methods: In this paper, microvascular endothelial function was assessed in FH patients and healthy controls using flow mediated skin fluorescence (FMSF), based on measurements of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide fluorescence intensity during brachial artery occlusion (ischemic response, IR) and immediately after occlusion (hyperemic response, HR). Low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) and total cholesterol (TC) were used to assess its relation with microvascular parameters evaluated in vivo., Results: LDL-C levels were significantly correlated to both HR
max (r = -0.548, p = 0.001) and HRindex (r = -0.514, p = 0.003). Similarly, there was a significant inverse correlation of TC levels and both HRmax (r = -0.538, p = 0.002) and HRindex (r = -0.512, p = 0.003). All FMSF parameters were found lower in FH patients compared to age- and sex-matched healthy controls. Hyperemic response (HRmax ) was significantly higher in FH patients examined on statins compared to those without any lipid-lowering treatment (19.9 ± 3.1 vs. 16.4 ± 4.2 respectively, p = 0.022)., Conclusions: This study shows that, in patients with FH, microvascular endothelial-dependent hyperemic response is impaired and inversely correlated to plasma cholesterol levels. Microvascular function was found better in FH patients receiving statins., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.)- Published
- 2021
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32. Carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) in patients with severe familial and non-familial hypercholesterolemia: The effect of measurement site on the IMT correlation with traditional cardiovascular risk factors and calcium scores.
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Gałąska R, Kulawiak-Gałąska D, Chmara M, Chlebus K, Mickiewicz A, Rynkiewicz A, Wasąg B, Studniarek M, Fijałkowski M, and Gruchała M
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- Carotid Intima-Media Thickness, Heart Disease Risk Factors, Humans, Calcium, Cardiovascular Diseases, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II
- Abstract
Background: The carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) measurement may be carried out proximally (pIMT) or distally (dIMT) in relation to the bulb of the common carotid artery which has significant implications on the results and correlation with risk factors. The aim of the study was to compare the pIMT and dIMT in patients with familial hypercholesterolemia confirmed by genetic testing (FH group) and patients with severe non-familial hypercholesterolemia, with negative results of genetic testing (NFH group) and to determine the correlation of results with traditional atherosclerotic risk factors and calcium scores., Methods: A total of 86 FH and 50 NFH patients underwent pIMT and dIMT measurements of both carotid arteries as well as computed tomography (CT) with coronary and thoracic aorta calcium scoring., Results: The meanpIMT of both right and left common carotid artery were significantly higher in patients with FH compared to the NFH group (meanpRIMT 0.721 ± 0.152 vs. 0.644 ± 0.156, p < 0.01, meanpLIMT 0.758 ± 0.173 vs. 0.670 ± 0.110, p < 0.01). Patient age, pre-treatment lowdensity lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol levels (LDLmax) at baseline and systolic blood pressure were independent predictors of pIMT increases in both carotid arteries. Smoking history, age and LDLmax were independent predictors of dIMT increase. There was a significant correlation between the calcium scores of the ascending aorta, coronary artery and aortic valve and all IMT parameters., Conclusions: The IMT measured proximally better between patients with familial and non-familial hypercholesterolemia. The association between IMT and traditional cardiovascular risk factors varies between measurement sites. IMT values correlate CT calcium scores in all patients with hypercholesterolaemia regardless of genetic etiology.
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- 2021
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33. Homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia due to APOB genetic variant with unusual clinical course.
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Chlebus K, Żarczyńska-Buchowiecka M, Pajkowski M, Chmara M, Tromp TR, and Gruchała M
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- Apolipoprotein B-100, Apolipoproteins B genetics, Homozygote, Humans, Mutation, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II diagnosis, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II genetics
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- 2021
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34. Observed and relative survival and 5-year outcomes of patients discharged after acute myocardial infarction: the nationwide AMI-PL database.
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Wojtyniak B, Gierlotka M, Opolski G, Rabczenko D, Ozierański K, Gąsior M, Chlebus K, Wierucki Ł, Rutkowski D, Dziełak D, Poloński L, and Zdrojewski T
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Hospitalization, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Discharge, Poland epidemiology, Risk Factors, Myocardial Infarction therapy
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Background: Long‑term follow‑up data from a large Polish acute myocardial infarction (AMI‑PL) database are still unavailable., Aims: This study aimed to assess the 5‑year outcomes of patients discharged after hospitalization for AMI in Poland in relation to age., Methods: The studywas based on the nationwide AMI‑PL registry including data on the management and long‑term outcomes of all patients admitted to hospitals with AMI (codes I21-I22 according to the International Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, 10th Revision [ICD ‑10]), derived from the database of the obligatory healthcare payer in Poland.The current analysis included all patients after AMI who were discharged alive between the years 2009 and 2010 (n = 134 602)., Results: The median age of the study patients was 66.8 years, 62.8% of them were male, and 57.1% had ST‑segment elevation myocardial infarction. Older patients, especially those at age ≥80 years, were less likely to receive invasive treatment during the index hospitalization and follow‑up. There were 37 437 deaths during the follow‑up, and the observed 5‑year survival ranged from 0.921 in women at the age below 55 years to 0.383 in men older than 80 years. Relative survival, however, ranged from 0.94 to 0.68 in these age‑sex groups. The mortality risk increased with age, was higher in men, in patients treated noninvasively, hospitalized for non-ST‑segment elevation myocardial infarction, and discharged from non‑cardiology wards. Patients were rehospitalized due to cardiovascular reasons in 63% of cases, heart failure in 17.9%, and AMI in 12.8%., Conclusions: More than 1 in 4 patients discharged after hospitalization for AMI died within 5 years. Age strongly affects the treatment and long‑term outcomes of AMI patients. Our findings indicate the need for improvement in secondary prevention after AMI.
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- 2020
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35. Microvascular endothelial dysfunction in a young patient with familial hypercholesterolemia.
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Pajkowski M, Chlebus K, and Hellmann M
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- Case-Control Studies, Humans, Hypercholesterolemia, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II genetics
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- 2020
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36. Cardiovascular risk factor profiles in familial hypercholesterolemia patients with and without genetic mutation compared to a nationally representative sample of adults in a high-risk European country.
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Chlebus K, Zdrojewski T, Gruchała M, Gałąska R, Pajkowski M, Kocejko MR, Chmara M, and Pencina MJ
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- Adult, Aged, Atherosclerosis epidemiology, Blood Pressure Determination, Body Mass Index, Cholesterol, HDL blood, Cholesterol, LDL blood, Cohort Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Diabetes Mellitus epidemiology, Female, Genetic Testing, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Poland epidemiology, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Smoking epidemiology, Triglycerides blood, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II blood, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II genetics, Mutation
- Abstract
Background: There is a paucity of data on the distribution of cardiovascular risk factors in patients with familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) as compared to the general population. The aim of the study was to compare cardiovascular risk factors in a cohort of FH patients to the representative sample of adults in Poland who represent a high-cardiovascular risk European region., Methods: We compared the distribution of risk factors in 1,382 individuals with FH phenotype referred for genetic testing between 2006 and 2014 to the National Centre of Familial Hypercholesterolemia in Gdansk, Poland. The cohort was comprised of 637 positive FH(+) and 745 negative FH(-) patients who were compared to a nationally representative sample of 2,413 adults age 18-79, standardized by age and sex, from the NATPOL 2011 study (NATPOL). We analyzed patients' distribution of history of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) and standard risk factors including total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglycerides, systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP, DBP), body mass index, smoking, and diabetes., Results: FH(+) patients (mean age 45.6 years) had the highest LDL-C of 241.7 mg/dL (95% CI 234.8-248.5) compared to 206.1 mg/dL (200.5-211.7) in FH(-) patients (mean age 48.2) and 126.2 mg/dL (124.8-127.6) in NATPOL. Mean SBP was the lowest in FH(+) patients at 128.7 mm Hg (126.7-130.7) compared to 133.4 mm Hg (132.6-134.3) in NATPOL and 134.4 mm Hg (132.3-136.5) in FH(-). No differences were found in the prevalence of diabetes and body mass index. Smoking was less common in FH(+) at 12.4% (9.4-15.4) compared to both FH(-) and NATPOL: 20.4% (16.6-24.1) and 28.4% (26.6-30.2), respectively. The prevalence of individuals with a history of ASCVD in both FH(+) and FH(-) was nearly 3-fold higher compared to NATPOL: 26% (21.8-30.1) and 26.6% (22.2-30.9) versus 9.5% (8.3-10.7), respectively., Conclusions: The FH(+) patients had significantly higher mean LDL-C, but the levels of nonlipid factors were lower or similar compared to the other groups. Both FH(+) and FH(-) were characterized by a heavy burden of ASCVD. This suggests that cholesterol, and no other risk factors, is a key contributor to cardiovascular risk in patients with FH, especially those with genetic mutation., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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37. Aortic valve calcium score in hypercholesterolemic patients with and without low-density lipoprotein receptor gene mutation.
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Gałąska R, Kulawiak-Gałąska D, Chmara M, Chlebus K, Studniarek M, Fijałkowski M, Wasąg B, Rynkiewicz A, and Gruchała M
- Subjects
- Aortic Valve diagnostic imaging, Aortic Valve physiopathology, Aortic Valve Stenosis physiopathology, Calcinosis physiopathology, Female, Humans, Hyperlipoproteinemias physiopathology, Male, Middle Aged, Mutation, Risk Factors, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Aortic Valve pathology, Aortic Valve Stenosis diagnostic imaging, Aortic Valve Stenosis genetics, Calcinosis diagnostic imaging, Calcinosis genetics, Hyperlipoproteinemias diagnostic imaging, Hyperlipoproteinemias genetics, Receptors, LDL genetics
- Abstract
The aim of this study was a comparison of aortic valve calcium score (AVCS) between patients with hypercholesterolemia and genetic diagnosis of familial hypercholesterolemia with low-density lipoprotein receptor gene mutation (LDLR-M group), versus patients with hypercholesterolemia without LDLR gene mutation (LDLR-WT group). A total of 72 LDLR-M patients and 50 LDLR-WT patients were enrolled in the study and underwent CT as a part of an assessment of coronary calcium scoring. AVCS was determined and compared between the two patient groups. AVCS was significantly higher in the LDLR-M group in comparison to the LDLR-WT group (13.8 ± 37.9 vs. 0.94 ± 3.1, p = 0.03). The Yates' chi-squared test for independence revealed that LDLR mutation and AVCS were significantly dependable (Chi^2 = 6.106, p = 0.013). The LDLR mutation was a strong predictor of a high AVCS (OR 7.83, 95% CI 2.08-29.50, p = 0.002) on multivariate regression analysis. Among the traditional risk factors, age (odds ratio 1.12, 95% CI 1.05-1.18, p<0.001) and SBP (OR 1.04, 95% CI 1.00-1.07, p = 0.045) were also significant for high result of AVCS. An assessment of computed tomography calcium scores showed that LDLR-M patients have increased AVCS in comparison to those with LDLR-WT. In addition, LDLR mutation can be considered as an independent risk factor of having high AVSC even after adjustment for risk factors including cholesterol levels. This may result from the associated process connected with the regulatory role of LDLR in evolution of aortic valve calcifications., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2018
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38. Overview of the current status of familial hypercholesterolaemia care in over 60 countries - The EAS Familial Hypercholesterolaemia Studies Collaboration (FHSC).
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Vallejo-Vaz AJ, De Marco M, Stevens CAT, Akram A, Freiberger T, Hovingh GK, Kastelein JJP, Mata P, Raal FJ, Santos RD, Soran H, Watts GF, Abifadel M, Aguilar-Salinas CA, Al-Khnifsawi M, AlKindi FA, Alnouri F, Alonso R, Al-Rasadi K, Al-Sarraf A, Ashavaid TF, Binder CJ, Bogsrud MP, Bourbon M, Bruckert E, Chlebus K, Corral P, Descamps O, Durst R, Ezhov M, Fras Z, Genest J, Groselj U, Harada-Shiba M, Kayikcioglu M, Lalic K, Lam CSP, Latkovskis G, Laufs U, Liberopoulos E, Lin J, Maher V, Majano N, Marais AD, März W, Mirrakhimov E, Miserez AR, Mitchenko O, Nawawi HM, Nordestgaard BG, Paragh G, Petrulioniene Z, Pojskic B, Postadzhiyan A, Reda A, Reiner Ž, Sadoh WE, Sahebkar A, Shehab A, Shek AB, Stoll M, Su TC, Subramaniam T, Susekov AV, Symeonides P, Tilney M, Tomlinson B, Truong TH, Tselepis AD, Tybjærg-Hansen A, Vázquez-Cárdenas A, Viigimaa M, Vohnout B, Widén E, Yamashita S, Banach M, Gaita D, Jiang L, Nilsson L, Santos LE, Schunkert H, Tokgözoğlu L, Car J, Catapano AL, and Ray KK
- Subjects
- Anticholesteremic Agents adverse effects, Biomarkers blood, Cholesterol, LDL blood, Cooperative Behavior, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Health Care Surveys, Health Services Accessibility, Healthcare Disparities, Humans, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II blood, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II diagnosis, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II epidemiology, Phenotype, Predictive Value of Tests, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Treatment Outcome, Anticholesteremic Agents therapeutic use, Blood Component Removal adverse effects, Global Health, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II therapy, International Cooperation
- Abstract
Background and Aims: Management of familial hypercholesterolaemia (FH) may vary across different settings due to factors related to population characteristics, practice, resources and/or policies. We conducted a survey among the worldwide network of EAS FHSC Lead Investigators to provide an overview of FH status in different countries., Methods: Lead Investigators from countries formally involved in the EAS FHSC by mid-May 2018 were invited to provide a brief report on FH status in their countries, including available information, programmes, initiatives, and management., Results: 63 countries provided reports. Data on FH prevalence are lacking in most countries. Where available, data tend to align with recent estimates, suggesting a higher frequency than that traditionally considered. Low rates of FH detection are reported across all regions. National registries and education programmes to improve FH awareness/knowledge are a recognised priority, but funding is often lacking. In most countries, diagnosis primarily relies on the Dutch Lipid Clinics Network criteria. Although available in many countries, genetic testing is not widely implemented (frequent cost issues). There are only a few national official government programmes for FH. Under-treatment is an issue. FH therapy is not universally reimbursed. PCSK9-inhibitors are available in ∼2/3 countries. Lipoprotein-apheresis is offered in ∼60% countries, although access is limited., Conclusions: FH is a recognised public health concern. Management varies widely across countries, with overall suboptimal identification and under-treatment. Efforts and initiatives to improve FH knowledge and management are underway, including development of national registries, but support, particularly from health authorities, and better funding are greatly needed., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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39. Temporal trends in secondary prevention in myocardial infarction patients discharged with left ventricular systolic dysfunction in Poland.
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Gasior M, Gierlotka M, Pyka Ł, Zdrojewski T, Wojtyniak B, Chlebus K, Rozentryt P, Niedziela J, Jankowski P, Nessler J, Opolski G, Hoffman P, Jankowska E, Polonski L, and Ponikowski P
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Coronary Artery Bypass trends, Female, Guideline Adherence trends, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Myocardial Infarction diagnosis, Myocardial Infarction mortality, Myocardial Infarction physiopathology, Patient Readmission trends, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention trends, Poland epidemiology, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Practice Patterns, Physicians' trends, Recurrence, Registries, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Systole, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left diagnosis, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left mortality, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left physiopathology, Myocardial Infarction prevention & control, Patient Discharge trends, Secondary Prevention trends, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left therapy, Ventricular Function, Left
- Abstract
Background The proportion of patients discharged after myocardial infarction with left ventricular systolic dysfunction remains high and the prognosis is unfavourable. The aim of this study was to analyse the temporal trends in the treatment and outcomes of a nationwide cohort of patients. Methods and results Data from the Polish Registry of Acute Coronary Syndromes and Acute Myocardial Infarction in Poland Registry were combined to achieve complete information on inhospital course, treatment and outcomes. An all-comer population of patients discharged with left ventricular ejection fraction of 40% or less formed the sample population ( n = 28,080). The patients were analysed for the incidence of significant temporal trends and their possible consequences. The implementation of guideline-based treatment at discharge was high. In the post-discharge course a trend towards a higher frequency of percutaneous coronary intervention and a lower prevalence of planned coronary artery bypass grafting procedures was observed. The number of implantable cardioverter defibrillator/cardiac resynchronisation therapy defibrillator implantations was increasing. Cardiac rehabilitation was performed in 19-23% cases. The post-discharge outpatient care was based on general practitioner visits, with only 47.9-48.1% of patients attending an ambulatory cardiology specialist visit. In 12 months of observation the frequency of heart failure rehospitalisations was 17.5-19.1%, while the prevalence of rehospitalisations due to myocardial infarction decreased (8.3% in 2009 to 6.7% in 2013, P < 0.001). A trend towards lower all-cause mortality was observed. Assessment of composite outcomes (death, myocardial infarction, stroke or heart failure rehospitalisation) adjusted for sex and age at 12 months revealed a significant decreasing trend. Conclusion The overall prognosis in this population is improving slowly. This may be due to the increasing prevalence of guideline-based forms of secondary prevention. Efforts aimed at maintaining these trends are essential, as overall compliance with these guideline remains suboptimal.
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- 2018
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40. Prevalence, diagnosis, and treatment of familial hypercholesterolaemia in outpatient practices in Poland.
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Chlebus K, Cybulska B, Gruchała M, Smaga A, Wróbel K, Wojtyniak B, Pajkowski M, Jankowski P, and Zdrojewski T
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Humans, Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Hypercholesterolemia diagnosis, Hypercholesterolemia drug therapy, Male, Middle Aged, Outpatients, Poland epidemiology, Prevalence, Hypercholesterolemia epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Familial hypercholesterolaemia (FH) is the most common genetic disease leading to premature atherosclerosis., Aim: The aim of the study was to evaluate the prevalence, diagnosis, and treatment of FH in outpatient practices in Poland., Methods: The study included a representative sample of 147 primary care physicians, cardiologists, and diabetologists caring for 2812 adult patients with hypercholesterolaemia and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) level > 1.8 mmol/L, who were treated with statins or did not receive statins due to intolerance or contraindications. The physicians declared whether they diagnosed FH in the study group. In addition, we evaluated the Dutch Lipid Clinic Network (DLCN) diagnostic criteria for FH in all patients. The results were weighted and extrapolated to the general outpatient population in Poland. Treatment and its effectiveness were also evaluated., Results: FH6+ score by the DLCN criteria was found in 3.6% of the study group, which translates by extrapolation to 136,300 adult patients with FH in Poland. Among patients with FH6+, this diagnosis was correctly made by physicians in 25% of cases and was not established in 75% of cases. Only 32.8% of patients received high statin doses. High LDL-C levels were found in a large proportion of patients, including levels ≥ 5.0 mmol/L in 42.7% of patients and ≥ 4.1 mmol/L in 59.7% of patients., Conclusions: Familial hypercholesterolaemia is inadequately diagnosed and treated in Poland, which calls for a radical im-provement of pre- and postgraduate education in this regard.
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- 2018
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41. [Coordinated heart failure care in Poland: towards optimal organisation of the health care system].
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Nessler J, Kozierkiewicz A, Gackowski A, Ponikowski P, Straburzynska-Migaj E, Uchmanowicz I, Hoffman P, Chlebus K, Gielerak G, Gąsior M, Grodzicki T, Gierczyński J, Jankowski P, Kaźmierczak J, Legutko J, Leszek P, Miłkowski M, Opolski G, Rozentryt P, Windak A, Witkowski A, Wysocki MJ, Zapaśnik A, and Zdrojewski T
- Subjects
- Cost-Benefit Analysis, Female, Heart Failure economics, Hospitalization, Humans, Male, Poland, Disease Management, Heart Failure therapy
- Abstract
Heart failure has becoming an increasing medical, economic, and social problem globally. The prevalence of this syndrome is rising, and despite unequivocal positive effects of modern therapy, reduction of mortality has been achieved at the cost of more frequent hospitalisations. Unlike in many European countries, in Poland heart failure is usually recognised later, at a more advanced stage of the disease, leaving less time for ambulatory treatment and resulting in a high number of hospitalisations. The current paper presents the most important data regarding morbidity and mortality due to heart failure in Poland. The experts in the field focus on the key source of high costs of therapy and highlight several critical organisational deficits present in the Polish health care system. This background information builds a basis for a concept of coordinated care for patients with heart failure. The paper discusses the fundamental elements of the system of coordinated care for patients with heart failure necessary to enhance the diagnosis, improve therapeutic effects, and reduce medical, economic, and social costs.
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- 2018
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42. Efficacy of clinical diagnostic criteria for familial hypercholesterolemia genetic testing in Poland.
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Mickiewicz A, Chmara M, Futema M, Fijalkowski M, Chlebus K, Galaska R, Bandurski T, Pajkowski M, Zuk M, Wasag B, Limon J, Rynkiewicz A, and Gruchala M
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Factors, DNA Mutational Analysis, Female, Genetic Testing, Heterozygote, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Mutation, Poland, ROC Curve, Young Adult, Apolipoprotein B-100 genetics, Coronary Artery Disease diagnosis, Coronary Artery Disease genetics, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II diagnosis, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II genetics, Receptors, LDL genetics
- Abstract
Background and Aims: Familial hypercholesterolemia (FH), which leads to premature cardiovascular events, still remains underrecognized and undertreated in most countries. Untreated FH individuals aged 20-39 years are at 100-fold higher risk of mortality from coronary heart disease compared to those of a general population. Therefore, special efforts should be implemented to diagnose FH patients at early stages of life. The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of the revised Dutch Lipid Clinic Network (DLCN) criteria proposed by the Polish Lipid Experts Forum to select index FH patients for DNA mutational analysis in Poland., Methods: The study included 193 unrelated adult patients (mean age 48 ± 13 years) with clinical diagnosis of FH based on the revised DLCN score, tested sequentially for mutations in LDLR and APOB genes using bidirectional Sanger sequencing and MLPA techniques. The cut-off points of the clinical FH criteria score were assessed by ROC statistics to identify patients with the highest probability of carrying an FH-causing mutation., Results: The causal heterozygous LDLR or APOB mutation was identified in 41% (80/193) of probands. Adults aged <40 years were more likely to carry an FH-causing mutation compared to subjects aged ≥40 years (65% vs. 33%; p < 0.001). LDL-C thresholds for the molecular diagnosis of FH were 5.79 mmol/l for individuals aged<40 and 6.7 mmol/l for subjects ≥40 years old. The threshold values of the clinical diagnostic score for efficient selection of patients for genetic testing were 5 and 7 points for individuals aged <40 and ≥40 years, respectively., Conclusions: The study validated the efficacy of proposed clinical FH criteria for the disease diagnosis in Poland. The clinical criteria score thresholds for positive FH molecular diagnosis differ depending on age (<40 and ≥40 years). We propose that in the healthcare systems with limited genetic testing resources individuals younger than 40 years, who fulfill the clinical criteria for possible, probable or definite FH should qualify for the FH mutation testing. The index patients aged ≥40 years with clinical diagnosis of probable or definite FH should also qualify for the genetic testing., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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43. Incidence, treatment, in-hospital mortality and one-year outcomes of acute myocardial infarction in Poland in 2009-2012--nationwide AMI-PL database.
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Gierlotka M, Zdrojewski T, Wojtyniak B, Poloński L, Stokwiszewski J, Gąsior M, Kozierkiewicz A, Kalarus Z, Wierucki Ł, Chlebus K, Zembala M, Wysocki M, and Opolski G
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Hospital Mortality, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Myocardial Infarction therapy, Poland epidemiology, Treatment Outcome, Myocardial Infarction epidemiology
- Abstract
Background and Aim: Nationwide data on acute myocardial infarction (AMI) are available for some Western but not for Central and Eastern European countries. We performed a study on nationwide data of all Polish AMI patients in 2009-2012 to assess incidence, quality of care, and cardiovascular events during 1 year following AMI., Methods: The database of the only public, obligatory health insurer in Poland (National Health Fund) together with data from the Central Statistical Office were used. AMI cases were selected based on primary diagnosis ICD-10 codes I21-I22. For years 2009-2012, index hospitalisations (n = 311,813) in a given year and death records were analysed. Additionally, data on hospitalisations, procedures and deaths during 1 year follow-up were obtained for 2009., Results: Age-adjusted incidence of AMI in Poland in 2009 was 196 cases per 100,000 population (176 per 100,000 were hospitalised), with a decreasing trend over time. The incidence was 2.5 times higher in men than in women. The median age was 63 years in men and 74 years in women. The proportion of ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) decreased from 59% to 48% in 2012, and the proportion of patients receiving invasive treatment increased from 72% to 81%. Age-adjusted case fatality rate was equal in women and men. In 2009, the number of patients with AMI was 75,054 (61% men, 39% women) and 83% of them were treated in cardiology units. Invasive strategy was used in 77% of patients with STEMI and 66% of those with non-STEMI, thrombolysis in 1% and coronary artery bypass grafting in 1.9% of patients. Invasive treatment was used less frequently in women and the elderly patients. When all hospitals where a patient was treated until the final discharge were taken into account, in-hospital mortality was 10.5%. The lowest in-hospital mortality was noted among patients treated invasively (6.3%). The total number of readmissions within 1 year following AMI was 84,718, of which 61.9% were due to cardiovascular causes. The most common causes were stable coronary artery disease (27%), heart failure (7.9%), recurrent infarction (7.0%), and unstable angina (6.8%). Within 1 year after AMI, only 22% of patients participated in a cardiac rehabilitation programme. Total 1-year mortality was 19.4% (invasive treatment 12.3%, non-invasive treatment 38.0%)., Conclusions: Standards of care and early outcomes in AMI in Poland are similar to Western countries. The major cause of higher mortality due to AMI in the Polish population is a high incidence of AMI, indicating a need for intensification of primary prevention programmes. Secondary prevention is also underused, especially in the field of cardiac rehabilitation.
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- 2015
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44. Comparison of wavelet transform modulus maxima and multifractal detrended fluctuation analysis of heart rate in patients with systolic dysfunction of left ventricle.
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Galaska R, Makowiec D, Dudkowska A, Koprowski A, Chlebus K, Wdowczyk-Szulc J, and Rynkiewicz A
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- Aged, Case-Control Studies, Circadian Rhythm, Electrocardiography methods, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Probability, Reference Values, Risk Assessment, Sensitivity and Specificity, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted, Electrocardiography, Ambulatory methods, Heart Failure, Systolic diagnosis, Heart Rate physiology, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: In recent years the WTMM (wavelet transform modulus maxima) and MDFA (multifractal detrended fluctuation analysis) methods have become widely used techniques for the determination of nonlinear, multifractal heart rate (HR) dynamics. The purpose of our study was to compare multifractal parameters of heart rate calculated using both methods in a group of 90 patients with reduced left ventricular systolic function (rlvs group) and in a group of 39 healthy persons (nsr group)., Methods: For each subject from the rlvs group (LVEF < or =40%) and the nsr group, a 24-hour ECG Holter monitoring was performed. The width of the multifractal spectrum and global Hurst exponent were calculated by means of WTMM and MDFA methods for 5-hour daytime and nighttime subsets., Results: The width of the multifractal spectrum was significantly lower and the Hurst exponent was significantly higher in rlvs group in comparison to nsr group both during diurnal activity and nocturnal rest according to MDFA and only during diurnal activity according to WTMM method. In both groups we observed significant differences of the multifractal spectrum width and the global Hurst exponent between the nighttime and daytime recordings., Conclusions: MDFA seems to be more sensitive as compared with WTMM method in differentiation between multifractal properties of the heart rate in healthy subjects and patients with left ventricular systolic dysfunction.
- Published
- 2008
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