Department of Cardiology, Heidelberg University Hospital, Im Neuenheimer Feld 410, 69120, Heidelberg, Germany.
German Centre for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK) Partner Site, Heidelberg/Mannheim, Germany.
Clin Res Cardiol. 2023 Feb;112(2):203-214. doi: 10.1007/s00392-022-02001-6. Epub 2022 Mar 21.
Cancer patients are at risk of suffering from cardiovascular diseases (CVD). Nevertheless, the impact of cardiovascular comorbidity on all-cause mortality (ACM) in large clinical cohorts is not well investigated. In this retrospective cohort study, we collected data from 40,329 patients who were subjected to cardiac catherization from 01/2006 to 12/2017 at University Hospital Heidelberg. The study population included 3666 patients with a diagnosis of cancer prior to catherization and 3666 propensity-score matched non-cancer patients according to age, gender, diabetes and hypertension. 5-year ACM in cancer patients was higher with a reduced left ventricular function (LVEF < 50%; 68.0% vs 50.9%) or cardiac biomarker elevation (high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTnT; 64.6% vs 44.6%) and N-terminal brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP; 62.9% vs 41.4%) compared to cancer patients without cardiac risk. Compared to non-cancer patients, NT-proBNP was found to be significantly higher (median NT-proBNP cancer: 881 ng/L, IQR [254; 3983 ng/L] vs non-cancer: 668 ng/L, IQR [179; 2704 ng/L]; p < 0.001, Wilcoxon-rank sum test) and turned out to predict ACM more accurately than hs-cTnT (NT-proBNP: AUC: 0.74; hs-cTnT: AUC: 0.63; p < 0.001, DeLong's test) in cancer patients. Risk factors for atherosclerosis, such as diabetes and age (> 65 years) were significant predictors for increased ACM in cancer patients in a multivariate analysis (OR diabetes: 1.96 (1.39-2.75); p < 0.001; OR age > 65 years: 2.95 (1.68-5.4); p < 0.001, logistic regression). Our data support the notion, that overall outcome in cancer patients who underwent cardiac catherization depends on cardiovascular comorbidities. Therefore, particularly cancer patients may benefit from standardized cardiac care.
癌症患者有患心血管疾病(CVD)的风险。然而,心血管合并症对大型临床队列全因死亡率(ACM)的影响尚未得到充分研究。在这项回顾性队列研究中,我们收集了 2006 年 1 月至 2017 年 12 月在海德堡大学医院接受心脏导管检查的 40329 名患者的数据。研究人群包括 3666 名在导管检查前被诊断患有癌症的患者和 3666 名根据年龄、性别、糖尿病和高血压进行倾向评分匹配的非癌症患者。与无心脏风险的癌症患者相比,左心室功能(LVEF<50%;68.0% vs 50.9%)或心脏生物标志物升高(高敏心肌肌钙蛋白 T(hs-cTnT;64.6% vs 44.6%)和 N 端脑利钠肽(NT-proBNP;62.9% vs 41.4%)的癌症患者的 5 年 ACM 更高。与非癌症患者相比,NT-proBNP 显著升高(癌症患者中位数 NT-proBNP:881ng/L,IQR [254;3983ng/L] vs 非癌症患者:668ng/L,IQR [179;2704ng/L];p<0.001,Wilcoxon 秩和检验),并且在癌症患者中比 hs-cTnT 更准确地预测 ACM(NT-proBNP:AUC:0.74;hs-cTnT:AUC:0.63;p<0.001,DeLong 检验)。糖尿病和年龄(>65 岁)等动脉粥样硬化危险因素是多变量分析中癌症患者 ACM 增加的显著预测因素(OR 糖尿病:1.96(1.39-2.75);p<0.001;OR 年龄>65 岁:2.95(1.68-5.4);p<0.001,逻辑回归)。我们的数据支持这样一种观点,即接受心脏导管检查的癌症患者的总体预后取决于心血管合并症。因此,特别是癌症患者可能受益于标准化的心脏护理。