Mora Samia, Redberg Rita F, Sharrett A Richey, Blumenthal Roger S
Center for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention, Division of Preventive Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical Schoo, Boston, MA, USA.
Circulation. 2005 Sep 13;112(11):1566-72. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.542993. Epub 2005 Sep 6.
National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel III (ATP III) guidelines recommend the use of Framingham risk scores (FRS) for cardiovascular assessment of asymptomatic individuals. We hypothesized that risk prediction could be improved with 2 non-ECG exercise test measures, exercise capacity (metabolic equivalents, or METs) and heart rate recovery (HRR).
An asymptomatic cohort with baseline treadmill tests (n=6126; 46% women, FRS <20%) was followed up prospectively for 20 years. Individuals with low (median or less) HRR or METs experienced 91% of all cardiovascular disease (CVD) deaths (225/246). After FRS adjustment, low HRR and METs individually were highly significant predictors of CVD death, but low HRR and METs together were associated with substantially higher risk (adjusted hazard ratio compared with high HRR/high METs for women 8.51, 95% CI 3.65 to 19.84; for men, 3.53, 95% CI 2.03 to 6.15; P<0.001 for both). At 10-year follow-up, FRS-adjusted CVD death risk associated with low HRR/low METs was less than at 20 years but remained significant (women 3.83, 95% CI 1.09 to 13.47, and men 2.70, 95% CI 1.11 to 6.55). The application of HRR/METs information to FRS assessment identified those at high risk (>0.5% annual CVD mortality) in half of women with FRS 6% to 9% and 10% to 19% and just under half of men with FRS 10% to 19%. Low HRR/low METs was also associated with an increased relative risk of CVD death in individuals with low-risk FRS (FRS <6% in women and <10% in men), but absolute CVD mortality rates were low in this subgroup.
Exercise testing may be a useful adjunct for clinical risk assessment in asymptomatic women with FRS 6% to 19% and men with FRS 10% to 19%.
美国国家胆固醇教育计划成人治疗专家组第三次报告(ATP III)指南推荐使用弗雷明汉风险评分(FRS)对无症状个体进行心血管评估。我们假设,通过两项非心电图运动测试指标,即运动能力(代谢当量,或METs)和心率恢复(HRR),可以改善风险预测。
对一组进行了基线跑步机测试的无症状队列(n = 6126;46%为女性,FRS < 20%)进行了为期20年的前瞻性随访。心率恢复或运动能力处于低水平(中位数及以下)的个体占所有心血管疾病(CVD)死亡人数的91%(225/246)。在对FRS进行调整后,心率恢复低和运动能力低分别是CVD死亡的高度显著预测因素,但心率恢复低和运动能力低共同存在时与更高的风险相关(与高心率恢复/高运动能力相比,女性的调整后风险比为8.51,95%置信区间为3.65至19.84;男性为3.53,95%置信区间为2.03至6.15;两者P均<0.001)。在10年随访时,与低心率恢复/低运动能力相关的经FRS调整的CVD死亡风险低于20年时,但仍具有显著性(女性为3.83,95%置信区间为1.09至13.47,男性为2.70,95%置信区间为1.11至6.55)。将心率恢复/运动能力信息应用于FRS评估,在FRS为6%至9%的女性中,以及在FRS为10%至19%的女性中,有一半、男性中略少于一半的个体被确定为高风险(每年CVD死亡率>0.5%)。心率恢复低/运动能力低在FRS低风险(女性FRS < 6%,男性FRS < 10%)的个体中也与CVD死亡相对风险增加相关,但该亚组的CVD绝对死亡率较低。
对于FRS为6%至19%的无症状女性和FRS为10%至19% 的无症状男性,运动测试可能是临床风险评估的有用辅助手段。