Cardiovascular Risk Prediction Equations Underestimate Risk in People Living with HIV: Comparison and Cut-point Redefinition for 19 Cardiovascular Risk Equations.
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引用次数: 1
Abstract
Background: Rates of cardiovascular disease are higher in people living with HIV. Early detection of high-risk subjects (applying cardiovascular risk equations) would allow preventive actions. D:A:D, ASCVD, and FRS:CVD equations are the most recommended. However, controversies surround these equations and cut-points, which have the greatest capacity to discriminate high-risk subjects.
Objectives: The study aims (i) to assess the association/agreement between cardiovascular risk levels obtained with D:A:D and fifteen other cardiovascular risk equations, (ii) to detect cardiovascular risk equation's capability to detect high-risk subjects, and (iii) to specify the optimal cardiovascular risk equation´s cut points for the prediction of carotid plaque presence, as a surrogate of high cardiovascular risk.
Methods: 86 adults with HIV were submitted to the clinical, laboratory, and cardiovascular risk evaluation (including carotid ultrasound measurements). Cardiovascular risk was evaluated through multiple risk equations (e.g., D.A.D, ASCVD, and FRS equations). Association and agreement between equations (Correlation, Bland-Altman, Williams´test) and equation's capacity to detect plaque presence (ROC curves, sensitivity, specificity) were evaluated.
Results: Cardiovascular risk equations showed a significant and positive correlation with plaque presence. Higher high-cardiovascular risk detection capability was obtained for ASCVD and D:A:D. Full D:A:D5y>0.88 %, ASCVD>2.80 %, and FRS:CVD>2.77 % correspond to 80 % sensitivity.
Conclusion: All cardiovascular risk equations underestimate the true risk in HIV subjects. The cut-- points for high cardiovascular risk were found to vary greatly from recommended in clinical guidelines.
期刊介绍:
Current HIV Research covers all the latest and outstanding developments of HIV research by publishing original research, review articles and guest edited thematic issues. The novel pioneering work in the basic and clinical fields on all areas of HIV research covers: virus replication and gene expression, HIV assembly, virus-cell interaction, viral pathogenesis, epidemiology and transmission, anti-retroviral therapy and adherence, drug discovery, the latest developments in HIV/AIDS vaccines and animal models, mechanisms and interactions with AIDS related diseases, social and public health issues related to HIV disease, and prevention of viral infection. Periodically, the journal invites guest editors to devote an issue on a particular area of HIV research of great interest that increases our understanding of the virus and its complex interaction with the host.