Arterial stiffness (from monitoring of Qkd interval) predict the occurrence of cardiovascular events and total mortality.
Philippe GosseRomain BoulestreauJulien DoubletJulie GaudissardAntoine CremerPublished in: Journal of human hypertension (2022)
Arterial stiffness, most often assessed with carotido-femoral pulse wave velocity predicts cardiovascular events but its use in clinical practice remains limited. The 24 h ambulatory monitoring of Blood pressure and timing of Korotkoff sounds (QKD interval) allows an automatic assessment of arterial stiffness and is an independent predictor of cardiovascular events in hypertensive patients. The long term follow up of our cohort of hypertensive patients gave us the opportunity to test the consequences of increased arterial stiffness on the incidence of all causes deaths and to define the populations who could benefit of this measurement beyond risk scores. The sample includes 930 patients (502 males, age 53 ± 13 years, baseline risk SCORE2-OP = 6.70 ± 4.97%) with an average follow up of 12.11 ± 7.4 years (0.3-30). In this population 169 cardiovascular events and 155 deaths were recorded. SCORE2-OP, 24 h Systolic Blood Pressure and arterial stiffness (QKDh) as a continuous or discontinuous variable (normal or reduced) were significantly and independently linked to the occurrence of cardiovascular events or all cause deaths in multivariate Cox model. ROC curves analysis show that measuring arterial stiffness with QKD method offers the best predictive value in patients with low or very low risk scores.
Keyphrases
- cardiovascular events
- blood pressure
- hypertensive patients
- coronary artery disease
- cardiovascular disease
- heart rate
- risk assessment
- clinical practice
- newly diagnosed
- blood glucose
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- machine learning
- metabolic syndrome
- heart failure
- adipose tissue
- data analysis
- insulin resistance
- patient reported outcomes
- patient reported
- weight loss
- skeletal muscle