Correlation between Comprehensive Evaluation of Coronary Artery Lesion Severity and Long-term Clinical Outcomes in Chinese Octogenarians with Acute Coronary Syndrome - 24/11/14
, Lian Chen a, Luyue Gai a, Hongbin Liu a, Zhijun Sun a, Jun Guo a, Yundai Chen a, ⁎ 
Resumen |
Background |
There is little known about long-term outcome data regarding acute coronary syndrome (ACS) in Chinese octogenarians (> 80 years old). Long-term outcomes of octogenarians with ACS may be associated with increased complicated coronary artery lesion severity.
Methods |
We classified 536 consecutive octogenarians with ACS into four groups based on Gensini score. Survival and major adverse cardiac event (MACE) rates were calculated using the Kaplan-Meier method. Multivariate Cox regression was used to identify mortality predictors. The follow-up period was 27 (IQR15-36) months.
Results |
The overall long-term mortality rate was 9.1% and increased from 3.0% in group 1 to 16.7% in group 4. Increasing coronary artery lesion severity was associated with increased long-term mortality and MACE rates. ROC curve analysis showed that the predictive cut-off value of Gensini score for mortality was 53. Gensini score provided significant reclassification of mortality (net reclassification index 0.195, P<0.01). Age, gender, heart rate, SBP, chronic renal failure, e-GFR, GRACE score, Gensini score, and ACS type were different between surviving and deceased patients. Notably, chronic renal failure (OR=2.55, P=0.036), GRACE score (OR=1.10, P=0.006), and Gensini score(OR=1.11, P=0.003) were the independent predictors of long-term mortality.
Conclusions |
Long-term mortality of octogenarians with ACS was associated with increased comprehensive coronary artery lesion severity. Gensini score was an effective parameter for evaluation of long-term mortality.
El texto completo de este artículo está disponible en PDF.Keywords : Acute coronary syndrome, Octogenarians, Risk factors, Coronary artery stenosis, Prognosis
Esquema
Vol 23 - N° 12
P. 1125-1131 - décembre 2014 Regresar al númeroBienvenido a EM-consulte, la referencia de los profesionales de la salud.
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