Carotid plaque-thickness and common carotid IMT show additive value in cardiovascular risk prediction and reclassification

Mauro Amato, Fabrizio Veglia, Ulf de Faire, Philippe Giral, Rainer Rauramaa, Andries J. Smit, Sudhir Kurl, Alessio Ravani, Beatrice Frigerio, Daniela Sansaro, Alice Bonomi, Calogero C. Tedesco, Samuela Castelnuovo, Elmo Mannarino, Steve E. Humphries, Anders Hamsten, Elena Tremoli, Damiano Baldassarre*, IMPROVE Study Grp

*Corresponding author voor dit werk

Onderzoeksoutput: ArticleAcademicpeer review

83 Citaten (Scopus)
433 Downloads (Pure)

Samenvatting

Background and aims: Carotid plaque size and the mean common carotid intima-media thickness measured in plaque-free areas (PF CC-IMTmean) have been identified as predictors of vascular events (VEs), but their complementarity in risk prediction and stratification is still unresolved. The aim of this study was to evaluate the independence of carotid plaque thickness and PF CC-IMTmean in cardiovascular risk prediction and risk stratification.

Methods: The IMPROVE-study is a European cohort (n = 3703), where the thickness of the largest plaque detected in the whole carotid tree was indexed as cIMT(max). PF CC-IMTmean was also assessed. Hazard Ratios (HR) comparing the top quartiles of cIMT(max) and PF CC-IMTmean versus their respective 1-3 quartiles were calculated using Cox regression.

Results: After a 36.2-month follow-up, there were 215 VEs (125 coronary, 73 cerebral and 17 peripheral). Both cIMT(max) and PF CC-IMTmean were mutually independent predictors of combined-VEs, after adjustment for center, age, sex, risk factors and pharmacological treatment [HR (95% CI) = 1.98 (1.47, 2.67) and 1.68 (1.23, 2.29), respectively]. Both variables were independent predictors of cerebrovascular events (ischemic stroke, transient ischemic attack), while only cIMT(max) was an independent predictor of coronary events (myocardial infarction, sudden cardiac death, angina pectoris, angioplasty, coronary bypass grafting). In reclassification analyses, PF CC-IMTmean significantly adds to a model including both Framingham Risk Factors and cIMT(max) (Integrated Discrimination Improvement; IDI = 0.009; p = 0.0001) and vice-versa (IDI = 0.02; p <0.0001).

Conclusions: cIMT(max) and PF CC-IMTmean are independent predictors of VEs, and as such, they should be used as additive rather than alternative variables in models for cardiovascular risk prediction and reclassification.

Originele taal-2English
Pagina's (van-tot)412-419
Aantal pagina's8
TijdschriftAtherosclerosis
Volume263
DOI's
StatusPublished - aug.-2017

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