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Patras R, Georgiopoulos G, Petropoulos I, Theodorakakou F, Delialis D, Angelidakis L, Gavriatopoulou M, Dimopoulou MA, Sianis A, Maneta E, Neofytou O, Terpos E, Dimopoulos MA, Kastritis E, Stamatelopoulos K. Sustained vasodilation after cold pressor test is an independent predictor of poor survival in primary AL amyloidosis. Eur Heart J 2022. [DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehac544.1790] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/14/2022] Open
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Primary AL amyloidosis is a rare yet lethal systemic disorder. Dysfunction of the autonomous nervous system due to disease-related nerve infiltration is a common manifestation of AL amyloidosis. Previously published own work indicated that AL patients present sustained paradoxical vasodilation in response to sympathetic stimulus, as assessed by cold pressor test (CPT). The clinical relevance of this finding is unknown.
Purpose
We sought to investigate the relationship between CPT-induced vascular response and mortality in AL amyloidosis.
Methods
We consecutively recruited 97 newly diagnosed patients with AL amyloidosis. CPT of the brachial artery was performed before treatment initiation. All measurements were assessed using high resolution ultrasonography (14.0Mhz multifrequency linear array probe, Vivid 7 Pro; General Electric Healthcare, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA). The maximum vasodilation of the brachial artery was measured during the sympathetic stimulus and 3 minutes after withdrawal (sustained response). All-cause mortality was defined as the primary end-point of the study.
Results
Mean age was 66 years with prevalence of male gender. Sustained vasodilation (but not vasodilation during CPT) was associated with heart failure, NYHA stage, BNP and peripheral vascular involvement (p<0.05 for all). Sustained vasodilation after withdrawal of the sympathetic stimulus was significantly associated with mortality as assessed by Cox regression analysis (HR: 1.149, 95% CI 1.042–1.269, p=0.005). This association remained significant after adjustment for age, sex, systolic blood pressure (SBP), nerve involvement and Mayo stage (HR: 1.123, 95% CI 1.014–1.243, p=0.026). A sustained vasodilation ≥3.35% from pre-stimulus diameter was associated with shorter survival (log-rank test, p=0.022, Figure 1). No association between vasodilation during sympathetic stress and mortality was observed.
Conclusions
In AL amyloidosis, sustained paradoxical vasodilation in response to sympathetic stimulus was associated with poor survival. The clinical utility of this index of vascular autonomic dysfunction as a potential prognostic and therapeutic biomarker in AL amyloidosis merits further investigation.
Funding Acknowledgement
Type of funding sources: None.
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Affiliation(s)
- R Patras
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - G Georgiopoulos
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - I Petropoulos
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - F Theodorakakou
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - D Delialis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - L Angelidakis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - M Gavriatopoulou
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - M A Dimopoulou
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - A Sianis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - E Maneta
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - O Neofytou
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - E Terpos
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - M A Dimopoulos
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - E Kastritis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - K Stamatelopoulos
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
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Mavraganis G, Georgiopoulos G, Delialis D, Aivalioti E, Patras R, Petropoulos I, Dimopoulou AM, Angelidakis L, Sianis A, Bampatsias D, Dimoula A, Maneta E, Kosmopoulos M, Stellos K, Stamatelopoulos K. Carotid ultrasonography improves residual risk stratification in guidelines-defined high cardiovascular risk patients. Eur Heart J 2022. [DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehac544.2317] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/13/2022] Open
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The clinical value of carotid atherosclerosis markers for residual risk stratification in high atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) risk patients is not established.
Purpose
In the present study we aimed to derive and validate optimal values of markers of carotid subclinical atherosclerosis improving risk stratification in guidelines-defined high ASCVD risk patients.
Methods
We consecutively analysed high or very high ASCVD risk patients from a cardiovascular (CV) prevention registry (n=751, derivation cohort) and from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study (n=2,897, validation cohort). Baseline ASCVD risk was defined using the 2021 European Society of Cardiology (ESC) guidelines (clinical ESCrisk). Intima-media thickness (IMT) excluding plaque, average maximal (avg.maxWT), maximal wall thickness (maxWT) and number of sites with carotid plaque were assessed. As endpoint of the study was defined the composite of CV death, acute myocardial infarction (MI) and revascularization after a median of 3.4 years in both cohorts and additionally for 16.7 years in the ARIC cohort.
Results
MaxWT >2.00mm and avg.maxWT >1.39mm provided incremental prognostic value, improved discrimination and correctly reclassified risk over the clinical ESCrisk both in the derivation and the validation cohort (p<0.05 for net reclassification index, integrated discrimination index and Delta Harrell's C index). MaxWT <0.9mm predicted very low probability of CV events (negative predictive value = 97% and 92% in the derivation and validation cohort, respectively). These findings were additionally confirmed for very long-term events in the validation cohort.
Conclusion
Integration of carotid ultrasonography in guidelines-defined risk stratification may identify very high risk patients in need for further residual risk reduction or at very low probability
Funding Acknowledgement
Type of funding sources: None.
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Affiliation(s)
- G Mavraganis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - G Georgiopoulos
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - D Delialis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - E Aivalioti
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - R Patras
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - I Petropoulos
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - A M Dimopoulou
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - L Angelidakis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - A Sianis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - D Bampatsias
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - A Dimoula
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - E Maneta
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - M Kosmopoulos
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
| | - K Stellos
- University of Heidelberg , Heidelberg , Germany
| | - K Stamatelopoulos
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics , Athens , Greece
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Delialis D, Aivalioti E, Mavraganis G, Dimopoulou AM, Sianis A, Angelidakis L, Patras R, Petropoulos I, Ioannou S, Syrigou R, Kanakakis J, Georgiopoulos G, Stellos K, Stamatelopoulos K. Remnant cholesterol is an independent determinant of the presence and extent of subclinical carotid atherosclerosis in statin-naive individuals. Eur Heart J 2021. [DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehab724.2561] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/13/2022] Open
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Despite continuous improvements of diagnostic and therapeutic algorithms for cardiovascular disease (CVD), mortality from CVD remains high suggesting unaddressed residual risk. Remnant cholesterol (RC) consists the cholesterol content of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins, which along with LDL cholesterol infiltrate the arterial wall, accumulate and cause atherosclerosis. Increased remnant cholesterol (RC) levels have been previously associated with future adverse cardiac events despite hypolipidemic therapy. However, a mechanistic association of RC levels with human atherosclerosis in vivo has not been proven in a clinical setting.
Purpose
To evaluate the association of RC levels with the presence and extend of subclinical carotid atherosclerosis.
Methods
In this retrospective cohort study, 438 subjects from the Athens Vascular Registry without clinically overt CVD or treatment with statin were recruited. Atherosclerotic burden was assessed by B-mode carotid ultrasonography using: 1. Maximal carotid wall thickness [maxWT, the highest intima-media thickness (IMT) or highest atherosclerotic plaque thickness (PLQ) if present derived from all carotid sites], 2. Total thickness (sumWT, sum of maximal wall thickness), 3) high plaque burden (PLQ ≥2) and 4) average carotid IMT (avgIMT). RC was calculated using the formula RC=total cholesterol-LDL-C-HDL-C.
Results
Mean (SD) age was 54.8±12.4 years old with 41% being males. Subjects with RC>median (=18mg/dl) had higher sumWT (6.12±0.7 vs 5.57±1.7, p=0.002), maxWT (1.61±0.7 vs 1.43±0.7, p=0.008) and avgIMT (0.88±0.16 vs 0.83±0.16, p=0.003) vs RC<median.>median was associated with higher odds for increased sumWT (highest tertile, OR: 2.15 95% CI 1.26–3.66, p=0.006) and maxWT (OR: 2.15 95% CI: 1.38–3.33, p=0.001), and a higher plaque burden (≥2 plaques, OR: 2.1 95% CI 1.93–3.1, p<0.001) after adjustment for age, gender and systolic blood pressure, glomerular filtration rate, smoking, diabetes mellitus, body mass index and LDL-C
Conclusion
In a statin-naive population without clinically overt CVD, increased RC levels were associated with the presence and extend of subclinical carotid atherosclerosis. These findings provide novel mechanistic insight into mechanisms associated with increased CVD risk in individuals with high RC levels.
Funding Acknowledgement
Type of funding sources: None.
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Affiliation(s)
- D Delialis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - E Aivalioti
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - G Mavraganis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - A M Dimopoulou
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - A Sianis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - L Angelidakis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - R Patras
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - I Petropoulos
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - S Ioannou
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - R Syrigou
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - J Kanakakis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - G Georgiopoulos
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - K Stellos
- Newcastle University, Biosciences Institute, Vascular Biology and Medicine Theme, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, United Kingdom
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Mavraganis G, Georgiopoulos G, Delialis D, Aivalioti E, Dimopoulou AM, Sianis A, Angelidakis L, Patras R, Petropoulos I, Ioannou S, Syrigou R, Kanakakis J, Stellos K, Stamatelopoulos K. Clinical utility of readily available novel markers of carotid atherosclerotic burden for reclassification and discrimination of very high cardiovascular risk. Eur Heart J 2021. [DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehab724.2524] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/13/2022] Open
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Among high cardiovascular (CV) risk patients, there is emerging need to recognize those who will benefit from new treatments targeting residual risk. Readily available modalities providing reclassification value would be clinically useful in this setting. Preliminary data suggest that carotid ultrasonography using plaque burden but not intima-media thickness (IMT) is associated with very high risk.
Objectives
We aimed to assess the reclassification ability of two markers of carotid atherosclerosis in high-risk patients, reflecting total atherosclerotic burden and the most severe lesion and to compare them with the routinely used carotid indices IMT and number of carotid plaques.
Methods
In an ongoing registry of patients who visited a cardiovascular protection clinic for cardiovascular risk assessment, we enrolled 735 consecutively recruited patients (mean age 63.1 years, 68.8% male) classified as high or very-high CV risk according to 2019 European Society of Cardiology /European Atherosclerosis Society Guidelines. Sum of carotid wall thickness (sumWT) and maximal wall thickness (maxWT) using high-resolution ultrasonography at baseline were used to assess the total burden and the most severe carotid lesion, respectively. These markers integrate maximum plaque height or maximum IMT if no plaque is present. All patients were followed for a median of 41 months and the primary end-point consisted of CV mortality, acute myocardial infarction or coronary revascularization.
Results
After adjustment for traditional CV risk factors, maxWT and sumWT were associated with the primary end-point (hazard ratio [HR]=1.73 (95% confidence interval [CI]:1.39 to 2.17) and 1.19 (95% CI 1.10 to 1.30) respectively). Both markers were superior in terms of reclassification and discrimination to identify very high risk over validated CV risk scores including the Heartscore and the SMART score (net reclassification index [NRI]=0.624, p<0.0001, integrated discrimination index [IDI]=0.060, p<0.0001 and difference in the area under the curve (δAUC) = 0.136, p<0.001 for maxWT and NRI=0.497, p<0.0001, IDI=0.046, p<0.0001 and δAUC = 0.128, p<0.001 for sumWT), IMT (NRI=0.502, p<0.0001, IDI= 0.058, p=0.02 for maxWT and NRI=0.559, p<0.0001, IDI=0.051, p=0.016 for sumWT) and the number of carotid plaques (NRI=0.614, p<0.0001, IDI=0.038, p=0.001 for maxWT and NRI=0.292, p=0.019, IDI=0.022, p=0.009 for sumWT).
Conclusions
The use of two novel cumulative markers of atherosclerotic burden improves risk stratification and discriminates high from very high CV risk. Given that carotid ultrasonography is a readily available modality, its clinical application for risk refinement of high-risk patients to facilitate treatment decisions merits further investigation.
Funding Acknowledgement
Type of funding sources: None.
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Affiliation(s)
- G Mavraganis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - G Georgiopoulos
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - D Delialis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - E Aivalioti
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - A M Dimopoulou
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - A Sianis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - L Angelidakis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - R Patras
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - I Petropoulos
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - S Ioannou
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - R Syrigou
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - J Kanakakis
- University of Athens Medical School, Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Athens, Greece
| | - K Stellos
- Newcastle University, Biosciences Institute, Vascular Biology and Medicine Theme, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, United Kingdom
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