| Literature DB >> 31046672 |
Sarah Alexander1, Meron Teshome2, Hena Patel1, Edie Y Chan3, Rami Doukky4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The diagnostic and prognostic utility of risk factors proposed by the 2012 American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology Foundation (AHA/ACCF) Scientific Statement on the cardiac assessment of asymptomatic liver transplantation candidates have not been validated. We investigated whether the sum of risk factors proposed by the AHA/ACCF can identify liver transplant candidates at increased cardiac risk.Entities:
Keywords: Coronary artery disease; Diagnosis; Liver; Prognosis; Transplantation
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31046672 PMCID: PMC6498507 DOI: 10.1186/s12872-019-1088-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord ISSN: 1471-2261 Impact factor: 2.298
Baseline Characteristics
| All Patients | Angiography Cohort | |
|---|---|---|
| Age at transplant, years | 55 ± 11 | 60 ± 8 |
| Age > 60 | 71 (32.3%) | 21 (50.0%) |
| Female sex | 85 (38.6%) | 17 (40.5%) |
| Race | ||
| Black | 54 (24.5%) | 13 (31%) |
| White | 117 (53.2%) | 21 (50.0%) |
| Hispanic | 15 (6.8%) | 3 (7.1%) |
| BMI, kg/m2 | 28 ± 8 | 31 ± 7 |
| Etiology of liver disease | ||
| Hepatitis C | 101 (40.6%) | 16 (38.1%) |
| Alcoholic | 51 (20.5%) | 5 (11.9%) |
| Non-Alcoholic Steatohepatitis | 22 (8.8%) | 10 (23.8%) |
| Autoimmune | 22 (8.8%) | 2 (4.8%) |
| Hyperlipidemia | 29 (13.2%) | 11 (26.2%) |
| Hypertension | 87 (39.5%) | 20 (47.6%) |
| Diabetes Mellitus | 74 (33.6%) | 19 (45.2%) |
| Tobacco Use | 27 (12.3%) | 7 (16.7%) |
| Congestive Heart Failure | 8 (3.6%) | 5 (11.9%) |
| Ejection Fraction | 62 ± 8% | 64 ± 11 |
| Left ventricular hypertrophy | 14 (6.4%) | 3 (7.1%) |
| Cerebrovascular disease (CVA/TIA) | 13 (5.9%) | 6 (14.3%) |
| Peripheral Arterial Disease | 14 (6.4%) | 6 (14.3%) |
| Known CAD | 29 (13.2%) | 15 (35.7%) |
| History of MI | 13 (5.9%) | 8 (19.0%) |
| History of PCI | 17 (7.7%) | 11 (26.2%) |
| History of CABG | 7 (3.2%) | 4 (9.5%) |
| MELD Score, mean ± SD | 21 ± 11 | 21 ± 12 |
| AHA/ACCF risk factors, mean ± SD | 2.3 ± 1.7 | 3.0 ± 1.8 |
| AHA/ACCF risk factors, n | ||
| 0–1 | 77 (35%) | 10 (23.8%) |
| 2 | 54 (24.5%) | 11 (26.2%) |
| 3 | 38 (17.3%) | 5 (11.9%) |
| 4 | 28 (12.7%) | 6 (14.3%) |
| 5 or more | 23 (10.5%) | 10 (23.8%) |
Data are presented as mean ± SD or n (%)
AHA/ACCF American Heart Association/American College of Cardiology Foundation, BMI body mass index, CABG coronary artery bypass grafting, CAD coronary artery disease, CVA cerebrovascular accident, MELD model End-Stage Liver Disease, MI myocardial infarction, PCI percutaneous coronary intervention, TIA transient ischemic attack
Fig. 1Value of the Sum of AHA/ACCF Risk Factors in Determining the Presence of Coronary Artery Disease. The graphs depict receiver operating characteristic curves of the sum of risk factors as a predictor of significant (a) and severe (b) coronary artery disease. Significant CAD is defined as ≥50% stenosis in any epicardial coronary artery. Severe CAD is defined as ≥50% stenosis in the left main coronary artery or ≥ 70% stenosis in any epicardial coronary artery. AUC, area under the curve; CAD, coronary artery disease; CI, 95% confidence intervals
Fig. 2Event-free Survival Based on AHA/ACCF Risk Factors. The graph depicts Kaplan-Meier survival curves for the composite outcome of cardiac death or myocardial infarction and the composite outcome of cardiac death, myocardial infarction, or coronary revascularization. * The secondary outcomes were identical since the 2 coronary revascularization events occurred shortly after MI. CD, cardiac death; MI, myocardial infarction; CR, coronary revascularization