| Literature DB >> 28607128 |
Rine Nakanishi1, Lohendran Baskaran1, Heidi Gransar1, Matthew J Budoff1, Stephan Achenbach1, Mouaz Al-Mallah1, Filippo Cademartiri1, Tracy Q Callister1, Hyuk-Jae Chang1, Kavitha Chinnaiyan1, Benjamin J W Chow1, Augustin DeLago1, Martin Hadamitzky1, Joerg Hausleiter1, Ricardo Cury1, Gudrun Feuchtner1, Yong-Jin Kim1, Jonathon Leipsic1, Philipp A Kaufmann1, Erica Maffei1, Gilbert Raff1, Leslee J Shaw1, Todd C Villines1, Allison Dunning1, Hugo Marques1, Gianluca Pontone1, Daniele Andreini1, Ronen Rubinshtein1, Jeroen Bax1, Erica Jones1, Niree Hindoyan1, Millie Gomez1, Fay Y Lin1, James K Min1, Daniel S Berman2.
Abstract
Hypertension is an atherosclerosis factor and is associated with cardiovascular risk. We investigated the relationship between hypertension and the presence, extent, and severity of coronary atherosclerosis in coronary computed tomographic angiography and cardiac events risk. Of 17 181 patients enrolled in the CONFIRM registry (Coronary CT Angiography Evaluation for Clinical Outcomes: An International Multicenter Registry) who underwent ≥64-detector row coronary computed tomographic angiography, we identified 14 803 patients without known coronary artery disease. Of these, 1434 hypertensive patients were matched to 1434 patients without hypertension. Major adverse cardiac events risk of hypertension and non-hypertensive patients was evaluated with Cox proportional hazards models. The prognostic associations between hypertension and no-hypertension with increasing degree of coronary stenosis severity (nonobstructive or obstructive ≥50%) and extent of coronary artery disease (segment involvement score of 1-5, >5) was also assessed. Hypertension patients less commonly had no coronary atherosclerosis and more commonly had nonobstructive and 1-, 2-, and 3-vessel disease than the no-hypertension group. During a mean follow-up of 5.2±1.2 years, 180 patients experienced cardiac events, with 104 (2.0%) occurring in the hypertension group and 76 (1.5%) occurring in the no-hypertension group (hazard ratios, 1.4; 95% confidence intervals, 1.0-1.9). Compared with no-hypertension patients without coronary atherosclerosis, hypertension patients with no coronary atherosclerosis and obstructive coronary disease tended to have higher risk of cardiac events. Similar trends were observed with respect to extent of coronary artery disease. Compared with no-hypertension patients, hypertensive patients have increased presence, extent, and severity of coronary atherosclerosis and tend to have an increase in major adverse cardiac events.Entities:
Keywords: angiography; atherosclerosis; coronary artery disease; hypertension; risk factors
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28607128 PMCID: PMC5518701 DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.117.09402
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hypertension ISSN: 0194-911X Impact factor: 10.190