| Literature DB >> 35275919 |
Michikazu Nakai1, Yoshitaka Iwanaga1, Yoko Sumita1, Shinichi Wada1, Haruhiko Hiramatsu1, Koji Iihara1, Takahide Kohro2, Issei Komuro3, Tomohiro Kuroda4, Tetsuya Matoba5, Masaharu Nakayama6, Kunihiro Nishimura1, Teruo Noguchi1, Tadamasa Takemura7, Teiji Tominaga8, Kazunori Toyoda1, Kenichi Tsujita9, Satoshi Yasuda10, Yoshihiro Miyamoto1, Hisao Ogawa11.
Abstract
Cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases are frequently interconnected due to underlying pathology involving atherosclerosis and thromboembolism. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of clinical interactions among cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases on patient outcomes using a large-scale nationwide claims-based dataset. Cardiovascular diseases were defined as myocardial infarction, heart failure, atrial fibrillation, and aortic dissection. Cerebrovascular diseases were defined as cerebral infarction, intracerebral hemorrhage, and subarachnoid hemorrhage. This retrospective study included 2,736,986 inpatient records (1,800,255 patients) at 911 hospitals from 2015 to 2016 from Japanese registry of all cardiac and vascular disease-diagnostic procedure combination dataset. Interactions among comorbidities and complications, rehospitalization, and clinical outcomes including in-hospital mortality were investigated. Among hospitalization records that involved cardiovascular disease, 5.9% (32,686 records) had cerebrovascular disease as a comorbidity and 2.1% (11,362 records) included an incident cerebrovascular complication after hospitalization. Cerebrovascular disease as a comorbidity or complication was associated with higher in-hospital mortality than no cerebrovascular disease (adjusted odds ratio (OR) [95% confidence interval]: 1.10 [1.06-1.14], 2.02 [1.91-2.13], respectively). Among 367,904 hospitalization records that involved cerebrovascular disease, 17.7% (63,647 records) had cardiovascular disease listed as comorbidity and 3.3% (11,834 records) as a complication. Only cardiovascular disease as a complication was associated with higher in-hospital mortality (adjusted OR [95% confidence interval]: 1.29 [1.22-1.37]). In addition, in-hospital mortality during rehospitalization due to the other disease was significantly higher than mortality during the hospitalization due to the first disease. In conclusion, substantial associations were observed between cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease in a large-scale nationwide claims-based dataset; these associations had a significant impact on clinical outcomes. More intensive prevention and management of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease might be crucial.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35275919 PMCID: PMC8916648 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0264390
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Study flow charts for comorbidities and complications of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases in JROAD-DPC.
AD, aortic dissection; AF, atrial fibrillation; CI, cerebral infarction; HF, heart failure; ICH, intracerebral hemorrhage; JROAD-DPC, Japanese Registry Of All cardiac and vascular Disease-Diagnostic Procedure Combination; MI, myocardial infarction; SAH, subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Fig 2Study flow charts showing analyzes of rehospitalization for cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases.
AD, aortic dissection; AF, atrial fibrillation; CI, cerebral infarction; HF, heart failure; ICH, intracerebral hemorrhage; JROAD-DPC, Japanese Registry Of All cardiac and vascular Disease-Diagnostic Procedure Combination; MI, myocardial infarction; SAH, subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Patient characteristics and outcomes.
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| Number | 496,281 | 32,686 | 11,362 | |
| Age group, years | 76 (66–85) | 81 (73–87) | 79 (69–86) | |
| <60 | 70,399 (14.2%) | 1,560 (4.8%) | 1,080 (9.6%) | |
| 60–69 | 95,138 (19.2%) | 4,190 (12.8%) | 1,858 (16.5%) | |
| 70–79 | 128,182 (25.9%) | 8,169 (25.0%) | 2,981 (26.4%) | |
| 80–89 | 146,913 (29.7%) | 13,114 (40.2%) | 3,879 (34.4%) | |
| ≥90 | 54,125 (10.9%) | 5,594 (17.1%) | 1,484 (13.2%) | |
| Male sex | 296,707 (59.8%) | 18,320 (56.0%) | 6,233 (54.9%) | |
| Comorbidity | ||||
| Hypertension | 264,709 (53.3%) | 17,265 (52.8%) | 5,808(51.1%) | |
| Diabetes mellitus | 122,750 (24.7%) | 8,088 (24.7%) | 2,742 (24.1%) | |
| Hyperlipidemia | 137,506 (27.7%) | 6,619 (20.3%) | 2,556 (22.5%) | |
| Chronic kidney disease | 55,099 (11.1%) | 3,944 (12.1%) | 1,141(10.0%) | |
| Carlson score | 2 (1–3) | 3 (2–4) | 2 (1–3) | |
| Clinical outcome | ||||
| In-hospital mortality | 45,741 (9.2%) | 4,280 (13.1%) | 1,935 (17.0%) | |
| ADL score at discharge | 100 (55–100) | 65 (5–100) | 55 (0–100) | |
| Length of hospital stay, days | 13 (7–22) | 17 (9–23) | 24 (13–41) | |
| Total cost of hospitalization, U.S. dollars | 10,351 (5,305–19,260) | 8,986 (5,130–16,875) | 14,644 (7,983–26,296) | |
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| Number | 281,999 | 63,647 | 11,834 | |
| Age group, years | 73 (64–82) | 80 (72–86) | 78 (69–85) | |
| <60 | 51,770 (18.4%) | 3,508 (5.5%) | 1,166 (9.9%) | |
| 60–69 | 61,410 (21.8%) | 8,743 (13.8%) | 1,916 (16.3%) | |
| 70–79 | 77,847 (27.7%) | 18,432 (29.0%) | 3,356 (28.5%) | |
| 80–89 | 72,601 (25.8%) | 24,280 (38.2%) | 4,019 (34.2%) | |
| ≥90 | 17,607 (6.3%) | 8,553 (13.5%) | 1,303 (11.1%) | |
| Male sex | 159,859 (56.7%) | 34,697 (54.5%) | 6,529 (55.2%) | |
| Comorbidity | ||||
| Hypertension | 150,755 (53.5%) | 33,420 (52.5%) | 6,421 (54.3%) | |
| Diabetes mellitus | 62,246 (22.1%) | 12,845 (20.2%) | 3,077 (26.0%) | |
| Hyperlipidemia | 68,516 (24.3%) | 11,739 (18.4%) | 2,922 (24.7%) | |
| Chronic kidney disease | 10,805 (3.8%) | 3,217 (5.1%) | 677 (5.7%) | |
| Carlson score | 1 (1–2) | 2 (1–3) | 2 (1–3) | |
| Clinical outcome | ||||
| In-hospital mortality | 27,217 (9.7%) | 6,691 (10.5%) | 1,521 (12.9%) | |
| ADL score at discharge | 70 (5–100) | 50 (0–100) | 50 (0–100) | |
| Length of hospital stay, days | 18 (10–32) | 21 (12–36) | 24 (14–40) | |
| Total cost of hospitalization, U.S.dollars | 9,037 (5,245–15,850) | 10,465 (6,158–17,434) | 12,421 (7,377–21,889) | |
Values are expressed as numbers (%) or medians (IQR).
ADL, activities of daily living; IQR, inter-quartile range.
Univariate and multivariable multilevel logistic regression results for in-hospital mortality.
| Univariate | Model I | Model II | |
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| No cerebrovascular disease | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| Cerebrovascular comorbidity | 1.33 (1.28, 1.37) | 1.15 (1.11, 1.19) | 1.10 (1.06, 1.14) |
| Cerebrovascular complication | 2.16 (2.05, 2.27) | 2.02 (1.92, 2.13) | 2.02 (1.91, 2.13) |
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| No cardiovascular disease | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| Cardiovascular comorbidity | 1.10 (1.06, 1.13) | 0.96 (0.93, 0.99) | 0.87 (0.85, 0.90) |
| Cardiovascular complication | 1.38 (1.31, 1.46) | 1.26 (1.19, 1.33) | 1.29 (1.22, 1.37) |
Values are expressed as odds ratios (95% confidence intervals).
Model I adjusted for age and sex.
Model II adjusted for age, sex, and comorbidities (hypertension, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, chronic kidney disease).
Patient characteristics in the rehospitalization analysis.
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| Number | 319,799 | 98,462 | 274,119 | 84,056 | 31,013 |
| Age, year | 76 (66–85) | 71 (62–80) | 81 (73–87) | 70 (62–78) | 72 (63–81) |
| Male sex | 191,226 (59.8%) | 70,801 (71.9%) | 145,310 (53.0%) | 54,594 (65.0%) | 17,888 (57.7%) |
| Comorbidity | |||||
| Hypertension | 171,377 (53.6%) | 58,916 (59.8%) | 146,501 (53.4%) | 40,171 (47.8%) | 19,414 (62.6%) |
| Diabetes mellitus | 85,454 (26.7%) | 28,210 (28.7%) | 77,580 (28.3%) | 14,626 (17.4%) | 3,036 (9.8%) |
| Hyperlipidemia | 92,038 (28.8%) | 54,792 (55.7%) | 56,627 (20.7%) | 19,387 (23.1%) | 5,859 (18.9%) |
| Chronic kidney disease | 40,692 (12.7%) | 6,225 (6.3%) | 44,308 (16.2%) | 3,937 (4.7%) | 1,811 (5.8%) |
| Mortality rate, % | 11.17 | 12.58 | 10.59 | 1.15 | 19.31 |
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| Number | 32,860 | 4,789 | 21,690 | 5,475 | 2,352 |
| Age, year | 81 (73–87) | 77 (69–84) | 84 (77–89) | 76 (68–83) | 76 (67–83) |
| Male sex | 18,458 (56.2%) | 3,210 (67.0%) | 11,373 (52.4%) | 3,401 (62.1%) | 1,247 (53.0%) |
| Comorbidity | |||||
| Hypertension | 17,066 (51.9%) | 2,594 (54.2%) | 10,964 (50.6%) | 2,902 (53.0%) | 1,380 (58.7%) |
| Diabetes mellitus | 8,014 (24.4%) | 1,415 (29.6%) | 5,688 (26.2%) | 1,007 (18.4%) | 256 (10.9%) |
| Hyperlipidemia | 6,752 (20.6%) | 1,771 (37.0%) | 3,651 (16.8%) | 1,256 (22.9%) | 403 (17.1%) |
| Chronic kidney disease | 3,908 (11.9%) | 418 (8.7%) | 3,175 (14.6%) | 272 (5.0%) | 166 (7.1%) |
| Mortality rate, % | 14.77 | 20.38 | 15.15 | 2.85 | 24.36 |
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| Number | 321,499 | 240,419 | 78,029 | 26,161 | |
| Age, year | 75 (65–83) | 76 (67–84) | 72 (62–82) | 66 (53–77) | |
| Male sex | 179,945 (56.0%) | 140,401 (58.4%) | 43,784 (56.1%) | 8,670 (33.1%) | |
| Comorbidity | |||||
| Hypertension | 170,604 (53.1%) | 122,485 (51.0%) | 49,469 (63.4%) | 12,896 (49.3%) | |
| Diabetes mellitus | 70,781 (22.0%) | 61,332 (25.5%) | 12,180 (15.6%) | 2,228 (8.5%) | |
| Hyperlipidemia | 75,795 (23.6%) | 68,291 (28.4%) | 9,372 (12.0%) | 3,222 (12.3%) | |
| Chronic kidney disease | 13,422 (4.2%) | 10,378 (4.3%) | 3,595 (4.6%) | 407 (1.6%) | |
| Mortality rate, % | 9.79 | 5.54 | 16.82 | 28.16 | |
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| Number | 69,576 | 60,839 | 7,691 | 1,438 | |
| Age, year | 80 (72–86) | 80 (73–87) | 78 (69–84) | 73 (62–83) | |
| Male sex | 37,731 (54.2%) | 32,901 (54.1%) | 4,576 (59.5%) | 477 (33.2%) | |
| Comorbidity | |||||
| Hypertension | 36,347 (52.2%) | 30,720 (50.5%) | 5,107 (66.4%) | 752 (52.3%) | |
| Diabetes mellitus | 14,224 (20.4%) | 12,656 (20.8%) | 1,472 (19.1%) | 178 (12.4%) | |
| Hyperlipidemia | 12,839 (18.5%) | 11,713 (19.3%) | 1,013 (13.2%) | 176 (12.2%) | |
| Chronic kidney disease | 3,723 (5.4%) | 3,171 (5.2%) | 508 (6.6%) | 60 (4.2%) | |
| Mortality rate, % | 11.42 | 9.79 | 19.46 | 35.95 | |
Values are expressed as numbers (%) or medians (interquartile range).
AD, aortic dissection; AF, atrial fibrillation; CI, cerebral infarction; HF, heart failure; ICH, intracerebral hemorrhage; MI, myocardial infarction; SAH, subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Fig 3Comparison of in-hospital mortality between first hospitalization and rehospitalization due to cardiovascular disease (A) or cerebrovascular disease (B).