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Hyperuricemia as a prognostic factor after acute coronary syndrome
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Title: Hyperuricemia as a prognostic factor after acute coronary syndrome |
Authors: López Pineda, Adriana Cordero, Alberto Carratala-Munuera, Concepcion Orozco-Beltran, Domingo Quesada, José A. Gil-Guillén, Vicente F BERTOMEU MARTINEZ, VICENTE |
Editor: Elsevier |
Department: Departamentos de la UMH::Medicina Clínica |
Issue Date: 2018-01-17 |
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/11000/34736 |
Abstract:
Background and aims: Many studies have reported the independent association between uric acid and
cardiovascular disease, its role as a risk predictor for outcomes in people with acute coronary syndrome
remains controversial. This study aims to assess the association between hyperuricemia and medium/
long-term clinical outcomes in people with acute coronary syndrome and determine whether adding
hyperuricemia to the GRACE score improves its predictive capability.
Methods: This cohort study included patients admitted for acute coronary syndrome between 2008 and
2013. Outcomes were cardiovascular and total mortality, and major cardiovascular events. We used a
multivariate model to adjust for potential confounding covariates and presented event rates with
Kaplan-Meier curves. After adding hyperuricemia to the GRACE score, we compared scores from the
reclassification table and the net reclassification improvement.
Results: 1119 participants were included and followed-up for a mean of 36 months. Multivariate models
showed hyperuricemia was independently associated with higher cardiovascular mortality (HR:1.91; 95%
CI:1.32e2.76; p < 0.01), higher all-cause mortality (HR:1.59; 95% CI:1.18e2.15; p < 0.01) and higher major
cardiovascular event rates (HR:1.36; 95% CI:1.11e1.67; p < 0.01). The hyperuricemia addition to GRACE
score led to reclassifying 26% of the participants, and net reclassification improvement was 34%. However,
the area under the curve increase was 0.009 and not statistically significant (p > 0.05).
Conclusions: Hyperuricemia is associated with higher medium/long-term mortality and major cardiovascular
event rates in patients following acute coronary syndrome. The addition of hyperuricemia to the
GRACE score seems to improve risk classification but the discrimination of the new predictive model did
not change. Hyperuricemic patients had higher all-cause mortality in medium and high-risk score
categories.
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Keywords/Subjects: cardiology risk factors uric acid hyperuricemia acute coronary syndrome |
Type of document: info:eu-repo/semantics/article |
Access rights: info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional |
DOI: 10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2018.01.017 |
Appears in Collections: Artículos Medicina Clínica
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