| Literature DB >> 31294030 |
Liliana Crisan1, Nathan Wong1, Don D Sin2, Hwa Mu Lee1,3.
Abstract
There is compelling epidemiological evidence that airway exposure to cigarette smoke, air pollution particles, as well as bacterial and viral pathogens is strongly related to acute ischemic events. Over the years, there have been important animal and human studies that have provided experimental evidence to support a causal link. Studies show that patients with cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) or risk factors for CVD are more likely to have major adverse cardiovascular events (MACEs) after an acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and patients with more severe COPD have higher cardiovascular mortality and morbidity than those with less severe COPD. The risk of MACEs in acute exacerbation of COPD is determined by the complex interactions between genetics, behavioral, metabolic, infectious, and environmental risk factors. To date, there are no guidelines regarding the prevention, screening, and management of the modifiable risk factors for MACEs in the context of COPD or COPD exacerbations, and there is insufficient CVD risk control in those with COPD. A deeper insight of the modifiable risk factors shared by CVD, COPD, and acute exacerbations of COPD may improve the strategies for reduction of MACEs in patients with COPD through vaccination, tight control of traditional CV risk factors and modifying lifestyle. This review summarizes the most recent studies regarding the pathophysiology and epidemiology of modifiable risk factors shared by CVD, COPD, and COPD exacerbations that could influence overall morbidity and mortality due to MACEs in patients with acute exacerbations of COPD.Entities:
Keywords: acute exacerbation of COPD; cardiovascular diseases; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; major adverse cardiovascular events; risk factors
Year: 2019 PMID: 31294030 PMCID: PMC6603127 DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2019.00079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cardiovasc Med ISSN: 2297-055X
Figure 1Risk factors for COPD and CVD associated with major cardiovascular events. CVD, cardiovascular disease; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; MI, myocardial infarction; TIA, transient ischemic attack.
Pathophysiology of risk factors for CVD, COPD, and MACEs.
| Acute exacerbation of COPD | Multifactorial (viruses, bacteria, smoking, air pollution, GERD) |
| Initiates the inflammatory milieu | |
| Atheromatous plaque destabilization | |
| Induces arterial stiffness and myocardial inflammation | |
| Smoking | COPD progression and exacerbation |
| Atheromatous plaque initiation, progression, and destabilization | |
| Diminishes transcription factor FOXP3 with role in T cell development | |
| Reduces cilia, stimulates macrophages | |
| Promotes the hypercoagulation state, activates plateles | |
| Accentuates endothelial dysfunction | |
| Increases ox-LDL | |
| May also have anti-inflammatory effect | |
| Air pollution | Atheromatous plaque initiation, progression, and destabilization |
| Contibutes to COPD progression and exacerbation | |
| Increases inflammation | |
| Hyperlipidemia | Atheromatous plaque initiation, progression, and destabilization |
| Ox-LDL activates transcription factors involved in COPD pathogenesis | |
| Ox-LDL increases chemotaxis of neutrophils, eosinophils, and monocytes | |
| Ox-LDL increases pro-inflammatory cytokines | |
| OxLDL increases ROS production | |
| Diabetes mellitus | Increases systemic inflammation and oxidative stress |
| May cause direct damage by hyperglycemia | |
| Involved in myocelular hypertrophy and fibrosis | |
| Hypertension | Induces structural alterations of the left ventricle and atrium |
| Induces vascular system alterations | |
| Atheromatous plaque progression | |
| Increases ROS via NADPH oxidase stimulated by angiotensin II |
COPD, chronic obstructive disease; GERD, gastroesophageal reflux disease; Ox-LDL, oxidized low-density lipoprotein; ROS, radical oxygen species.
Benefits of controlled risk factors for CVD, COPD, and MACEs.
| Influenza vaccination | 30% decreased risk of MACEs over 1 year | ( |
| Pneumococcal vaccination | 14% decreased risk of MACEs | ( |
| Prophylactic antibiotherapy | 33% reduction in frequency of COPD exacerbations/person/year | ( |
| No significant effects on severe adverse events or all cause-mortality | ( | |
| Smoking cessation | 32% decreased risk of death or recurrent MI | ( |
| 35% decreased risk of death or heart failure hospitalization | ( | |
| 37% at 1 year and 62% at 3 years decreased risk of CHD mortality | ( | |
| 16% decreased risk of COPD exacerbations after 5 years of cessation | ( | |
| 35% decreased risk of COPD exacerbations after 10 years of cessation | ( | |
| Improved cookstoves | 36% decreased risk of COPD in women | ( |
| LDL-C control | 22% reduction in MACEs/1.0mmol/L LDL-C reduction | ( |
| Tight glycemic control | 42% decreased risk of any MACEs | ( |
| 57% decreased risk of nonfatal MI, stroke, or death from CVD | ( | |
| Tight blood pressure control | 50% decreased risk of heart failure | ( |
| 30–40% decreased risk of stroke | ( | |
| 20–25% decreased risk of MI | ( |
CVD, cardiovascular disease; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; MACEs, major adverse cardiovascular events; CHD, coronary heart disease; MI, myocardial infarction; LDL, low-density lipoprotein.
Evidence of risk factors that could contribute to MACEs.
| COPD exacerbations | Kunisaki et al. ( | Cohort analysis | 3.8 HR for CVD events 30-day post-exacerbation |
| Kunisaki et al. ( | Cohort analysis | 9.9 HR for CVD events 30-day post-hospitalized exacerbation | |
| Donaldson et al. ( | Retrospective | 2.27 higher MI risk 1 to 5 days post-exacerbation | |
| Donaldson et al. ( | Retrospective | 1.26 higher stroke risk 1 to 49 days post-exacerbation | |
| Rothnie et al. ( | Retrospective | 2.58 incidence rate ratio for MI, severe exacerbation | |
| Rothnie et al. ( | Retrospective | 1.58 incidence rate ratio for MI, moderate exacerbation | |
| Smoking | Hackshaw et al. ( | Meta-analysis | RR of CHD, 1 cigarrete/day: 1.74 for men, 2.19 for women |
| RR of CHD, 20 cigarretes/day: 2:27 for men, 3.95 for women | |||
| Center for disease control and prevention | Risk of CHD mortality: increased by 4 times for men, 5 times for women | ||
| Risk of COPD mortality: increased by 17 times for men, 12 times for women | |||
| Mulpuru et al. ( | Prospective, multicenter | Smokers with COPD exacerbations: double risk for ICU admision | |
| Lubin et al. ( | Prospective cohort | RR for CVD: higher with duration vs. qauntity smoked/day | |
| Bhatt et al. ( | Cross-sectional, multicenter | RR for COPD: higher with duration vs. pack-years index | |
| Air pollution | World Health Organization ( | Causes 7 mil. deaths worlwide: 58% CVD and 18% COPD | |
| Pope et al. ( | Prosective cohort | 1.34 HR for CVD mortality with long-term exposure to PM2.5 | |
| Hyperlipidemia | Bartlett et al. ( | Prosective cohort | 1.3 OR for CVD with low HDL-C+TG or LDL ≥ 100 mg/dl |
| 1.6 OR for CVD with low HDL-C+TG and LDL-C ≥ 100 mg/dl | |||
| Tipping et al. ( | Meta-analysis | 1.13 RR for CHD/3.5-fold higher usual Lp(a) | |
| Shen et al. ( | Prospective cohort | Increased serum Ox-LDL in COPD patients vs. controls | |
| Basil et al. ( | Cross-sectional | COPD vs. controls: no diference in TC, HDL-C, LDL-C and TG | |
| COPD patients: lower Apo B-100 and Lp(a) | |||
| Chan et al. ( | Retrospective | Hyperlipidemia+COPD: 0.64 HR for mortality | |
| Diabetes mellitus | Baigent et al. ( | Meta-analysis | Increases CVD mortality by 2–6 times |
| Peters et al. ( | Systematic review | CHD risk higher for women vs. men with DM | |
| Mulpuru et al. ( | Prospective | COPD exacerbation+DM with end organ complication: 3.5 OR for ICU admission | |
| COPD exacerbation+DM without end organ complication: 1.7 OR for ICU admmission | |||
| Hypertension | Lawes et al. ( | Causes 47% of all CHD and 54% of all stroke | |
| Lewington et al. ( | Meta-analysis | Double CVD mortality with every 20 mmg over BP of 115/75 |
COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CVD, cardiovascular disease; CHD, coronary heart disease; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; HDL, high-density lipoprotein, HR, hazard ratio; RR, relative risk; WHO, World Health Organization.