| Literature DB >> 32457429 |
Hirofumi Tomiyama1, Charalambos Vlachopoulos2, Panagiotis Xaplanteris2,3, Hiroki Nakano4, Kazuki Shiina4, Tomoko Ishizu5, Takahide Kohro6, Yukihito Higashi7, Bonpei Takase8, Toru Suzuki9, Tsutomu Yamazaki10, Tomoo Furumoto11, Kazuomi Kario12, Teruo Inoue13, Shinji Koba14, Yasuhiko Takemoto15, Takuzo Hano16, Masataka Sata17, Yutaka Ishibashi18, Koichi Node19, Atsushi Tanaka19, Koji Maemura20, Yusuke Ohya21, Taiji Furukawa22, Hiroshi Ito23, Toshiaki Ohkuma24, Toshiharu Ninomiya25, Taishiro Chikamori4, Akira Yamashina4, Shin-Ichiro Ueda26.
Abstract
The score based on the office systolic blood pressure, age, fasting blood glucose level, and estimated glomerular filtration rate (SAGE score) has been proposed as a useful marker to identify elevated values of carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (PWV). The present cross-sectional study was conducted to examine whether the SAGE score is also a useful marker to identify subjects with elevated brachial-ankle PWV values in Japanese subjects with hypertension. We measured the brachial-ankle PWV and calculated the SAGE score in a total of 1019 employees of a Japanese company with hypertension and 817 subjects with hypertension derived from a multicenter study cohort. The analyses in this study were based on data from these two study groups as well as on a composite population of the two (n = 1836). The receiver operating characteristic curve analysis showed that the area under the curve to identify subjects with brachial-ankle PWV values of ≥1800 cm/s was over 0.70 in each of the three study groups. Even after adjustments, a SAGE score ≥7 had a significant odds ratio for identifying subjects with brachial-ankle PWV values ≥1800 cm/s in the 1836 study subjects from the composite occupational and multicenter study cohort (odds ratio = 2.1, 95% confidence interval = 1.4-3.0, P < 0.01). Thus, in Japanese subjects with hypertension, the SAGE score may be a useful marker for identifying subjects with elevated brachial-ankle PWV values.Entities:
Keywords: Arterial stiffness; Pulse wave velocity; Risk factors
Year: 2020 PMID: 32457429 DOI: 10.1038/s41440-020-0472-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hypertens Res ISSN: 0916-9636 Impact factor: 3.872