| Literature DB >> 27583922 |
Chun-An Cheng1, Wu-Chien Chien, Chien-Yeh Hsu, Hui-Chen Lin, Hung-Wen Chiu.
Abstract
Because stroke is the third leading disease that causes mortality in the world, the prevention of stroke from advanced carotid stenosis is an important issue. The carotid stent (CAS) is a less invasive to treat advanced carotid stenosis, but for high-risk patients it may cause some events after the procedure that reduces the benefit of stroke prevention. Because patients and their families have less information about risk of events after CAS and are easy concerned, this study calculates the individual probability of major adverse cardiovascular events including any stroke, myocardial infarction, or death after procedure.The analyzed dataset was composed of patients undergoing CAS from the longitudinal National Health Insurance claim database in Taiwan. The validation dataset was composed of patients undergoing CAS from the Tri-Service General Hospital. We excluded patients under 18 years of age. The prediction model was constructed with a multivariable Cox proportional hazard regression and performed with forward stepwise selection. The nomogram construction was based on the multivariable Cox model.The risk factors were determined as follows: age with a hazard ratio (HR) of 1.027 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.002-1.053) for every 1 year older, congestive heart failure with a HR of 2.196 (95% CI: 1.368-3.524), malignant disease with a HR of 1.724 (95% CI: 1.009-2.944), diabetes mellitus with a HR of 1.722 (95% CI: 1.109-2.674), and symptomatic status with a HR of 1.604 (95% CI: 1.027-2.507). The model showed good discrimination with a P < 0.001 (concordance index, 0.681; bootstrap corrected, 0.661) in the derivation data. The concordance index of external validation was 0.66 (P = 0.048), which indicates acceptable performance.We developed a nomogram with a visual scale method and prognostic information, and it is easy to use in clinical practice. The integer-base method may support communication between clinicians and patients before CAS to reduce the anxiety about making a treatment decision. However, insofar as older patients with multiple comorbidities are at high risk, the option of an alternative treatment strategy with medical therapy should be suggested. In the future, prospective tests should be performed to validate whether this model helps patients to prevent events.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27583922 PMCID: PMC5008606 DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000004747
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) ISSN: 0025-7974 Impact factor: 1.889
Baseline characteristics in derivation dataset with or without major adverse cardiovascular events.
The characteristics of patients in diffident dataset.
Figure 1Nomogram for probability of major adverse cardiovascular events undergoing carotid stent. MACE = major adverse cardiovascular events.
Figure 2Nomogram application. A straight line was drawn upward to determine the points for the variables (up arrow). For example, a patient aged 65 years (61 points) and with diabetes mellitus (23 points), symptomatic status (20 points), congestive heart failure (33 points), and malignant disease (22 points) receives a total point score of 159. The probabilities of MACE-free survival at 1 year is found by drawing a vertical line from the total points’ axis of 159 straight downward to the outcome axes with of 50% (down arrow) and a 50% probability of MACE. MACE = major adverse cardiovascular events.
Figure 3One year cumulative incidence of MACE in NHIRD dataset according to risk groups: 6.5% MACE occurred during low-risk group, 18.3% MACE occurred during intermedia group, and 23.7% MACE occurred during high-risk group (log-rank test: P = 0.001).
Figure 4One year cumulative incidence of MACE in validation dataset according to risk groups: 8.9% MACE occurred during low-risk group, 24.5% MACE occurred during intermedia group, and 28.1% MACE occurred during high-risk group (log-rank test: P = 0.041).
Hazard ratios evaluated in the derivation and validation dataset.