Gonzalez A, Maradit Kremers H, Crowson C S, Ballman K V, Roger V L, Jacobsen S J, O'Fallon W M, Gabriel S E
Division of Epidemiology, Department of Health Sciences Research, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA.
Ann Rheum Dis. 2008 Jan;67(1):64-9. doi: 10.1136/ard.2006.059980. Epub 2007 May 21.
To compare the frequency of traditional cardiovascular (CV) risk factors in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) compared to non-RA subjects, and examine their impact on the risk of developing selected CV events (myocardial infarction (MI), heart failure (HF) and CV death) in these two groups.
We examined a population-based incidence cohort of subjects with RA (defined according to the 1987 American College of Rheumatology criteria), and an age- and sex-matched non-RA cohort. All subjects were followed longitudinally through their complete community medical records, until death, migration, or 1 January 2001. Clinical CV risk factors and outcomes were defined using validated criteria. The chi2 test was used to compare the frequency of each CV risk factor at baseline. Person-years methods were used to estimate the rate of occurrence of each CV risk factor during follow-up. Cox models were used to examine the influence of CV risk factors on the development of CV outcomes.
A total of 603 RA and 603 non-RA subjects (73% female; mean age 58 years) were followed for a mean of 15 and 17 years (total: 8842 and 10,101 person-years), respectively. At baseline, RA subjects were significantly more likely to be former or current smokers when compared to non-RA subjects (p<0.001). Male gender, smoking, and personal cardiac history had weaker associations with CV events among RA subjects, compared to non-RA subjects. There was no significant difference between RA and non-RA subjects in the risk imparted with respect to the other CV risk factors (ie, family cardiac history, hypertension, dyslipidaemia, body mass index, or diabetes mellitus).
While some traditional CV risk factors imparted similar risk among RA compared with non-RA subjects, others (ie, male gender, smoking and personal cardiac history) imparted significantly less risk for the development of CV disease. These differences in the overall impact of traditional CV risk factors suggest that strategies to prevent CV disease and mortality focused solely on controlling traditional CV risk factors may be relatively less beneficial in RA subjects than in the general population. Further research is needed to determine optimal approaches to reducing CV morbidity and mortality in persons with RA.
比较类风湿关节炎(RA)患者与非RA患者中传统心血管(CV)危险因素的频率,并研究这些因素对两组中发生特定CV事件(心肌梗死(MI)、心力衰竭(HF)和CV死亡)风险的影响。
我们研究了一个基于人群的RA患者发病队列(根据1987年美国风湿病学会标准定义),以及一个年龄和性别匹配的非RA队列。所有受试者通过其完整的社区医疗记录进行纵向随访,直至死亡、迁移或2001年1月1日。临床CV危险因素和结局使用经过验证的标准进行定义。采用卡方检验比较基线时各CV危险因素的频率。使用人年法估计随访期间各CV危险因素的发生率。采用Cox模型研究CV危险因素对CV结局发生的影响。
共对603例RA患者和603例非RA患者(73%为女性;平均年龄58岁)分别进行了平均15年和17年的随访(总计:8842和10101人年)。在基线时,与非RA患者相比,RA患者更有可能是既往或当前吸烟者(p<0.001)。与非RA患者相比,男性、吸烟和个人心脏病史与RA患者中CV事件的关联较弱。在其他CV危险因素(即家族心脏病史、高血压、血脂异常、体重指数或糖尿病)方面,RA患者和非RA患者之间的风险没有显著差异。
虽然一些传统CV危险因素在RA患者和非RA患者中带来的风险相似,但其他因素(即男性、吸烟和个人心脏病史)导致CV疾病发生的风险显著较低。传统CV危险因素总体影响的这些差异表明,仅专注于控制传统CV危险因素以预防CV疾病和死亡的策略,在RA患者中可能不如在一般人群中有益。需要进一步研究以确定降低RA患者CV发病率和死亡率的最佳方法。