McDermott M M, Feinglass J, Slavensky R, Pearce W H
Division of General Internal Medicine, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Illinois.
J Gen Intern Med. 1994 Aug;9(8):445-9. doi: 10.1007/BF02599061.
To determine whether the ankle-brachial index (ABI) predicts survival rates among patients with peripheral vascular disease.
A retrospective survival analysis of patients with abnormal ABIs who visited the authors' blood-flow laboratory during 1987. The National Death Index was used to ascertain survival status for all patients up to January 1, 1992. Kaplan-Meier and Cox proportional hazards analyses were used to determine the relationship between increasing lower-extremity ischemia, measured by ABI, and survival time. Clinical characteristics controlled for included age, smoking history, gender, and comorbidities, as well as the presence of lower-extremity rest pain, ulcer, or gangrene.
A university hospital blood-flow laboratory.
PATIENTS/PARTICIPANTS: Four hundred twenty-two patients who had no prior history of lower-extremity vascular procedures and who had ABIs < 0.92 in 1987.
Cumulative survival probabilities at 52 months' (4.3 years') follow-up were 69% for patients who had ABIs = 0.5-0.91, 62% for patients who had ABIs = 0.31-0.49, and 47% for patients who had ABIs < or = 0.3. In multivariate Cox proportional hazard analysis, the relative hazard of death was 1.8 (95% confidence interval = 1.2-2.9, p < 0.01) for the patients who had ABIs < or = 0.3 compared with the patients who had ABIs 0.5-0.91. Other independent predictors of poorer survival included age > 65 years (p < 0.001); a diagnosis of cancer, renal failure, or chronic lung disease (p < 0.001); and congestive heart failure (p < 0.04).
The ABI is a powerful tool for predicting survival in patients with peripheral vascular disease. Patients with ABIs < or = 0.3 have significantly poorer survival than do patients with ABIs 0.31-0.91. Further study is needed to determine whether aggressive coronary risk-factor modification, a work-up for undiagnosed coronary or cerebrovascular atherosclerotic disease, or aggressive therapy for known atherosclerosis can improve survival of patients with ABIs < or = 0.3.
确定踝臂指数(ABI)是否可预测外周血管疾病患者的生存率。
对1987年到作者血流实验室就诊的ABI异常患者进行回顾性生存分析。使用国家死亡指数确定截至1992年1月1日所有患者的生存状况。采用Kaplan-Meier法和Cox比例风险分析法来确定通过ABI测量的下肢缺血加重与生存时间之间的关系。所控制的临床特征包括年龄、吸烟史、性别、合并症,以及下肢静息痛、溃疡或坏疽的存在情况。
一家大学医院的血流实验室。
患者/参与者:422例既往无下肢血管手术史且1987年ABI<0.92的患者。
在52个月(4.3年)的随访中,ABI为0.5 - 0.91的患者累积生存概率为69%,ABI为0.31 - 0.49的患者为62%,ABI≤0.3的患者为47%。在多变量Cox比例风险分析中,与ABI为0.5 - 0.91的患者相比,ABI≤0.3的患者死亡相对风险为1.8(95%置信区间 = 1.2 - 2.9,p<0.01)。生存较差的其他独立预测因素包括年龄>65岁(p<0.001);癌症、肾衰竭或慢性肺病诊断(p<0.001);以及充血性心力衰竭(p<0.04)。
ABI是预测外周血管疾病患者生存的有力工具。ABI≤0.3的患者生存率明显低于ABI为0.31 - 0.91的患者。需要进一步研究以确定积极改变冠状动脉危险因素、对未诊断的冠状动脉或脑血管动脉粥样硬化疾病进行检查,或对已知动脉粥样硬化进行积极治疗是否可提高ABI≤0.3患者的生存率。