Brachial-Ankle Pulse Wave Velocity and the Risk Prediction of Cardiovascular Disease

Author:

Ohkuma Toshiaki1,Ninomiya Toshiharu1,Tomiyama Hirofumi1,Kario Kazuomi1,Hoshide Satoshi1,Kita Yoshikuni1,Inoguchi Toyoshi1,Maeda Yasutaka1,Kohara Katsuhiko1,Tabara Yasuharu1,Nakamura Motoyuki1,Ohkubo Takayoshi1,Watada Hirotaka1,Munakata Masanori1,Ohishi Mitsuru1,Ito Norihisa1,Nakamura Michinari1,Shoji Tetsuo1,Vlachopoulos Charalambos1,Yamashina Akira1,Nagano Masahide2,Yukiyo Ogata3,Kabutoya Tomoyuki3,Asayama Kei4,Takashima Naoyuki5,Chowdhury Tanvir Turin6,Mitsuki-Shinohara Kayo7,Yamashita Takeshi8

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Medicine and Clinical Science, Graduate School of Medical Sciences (T. Ohkuma), Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Graduate School of Medical Sciences (T.N.), Innovation Center for Medical Redox Navigation (T.I.), and Department of Medicine and Bioregulatory Science, Graduate School of Medical Sciences (Y.M.), Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan; Department of Cardiology, Tokyo Medical University, Japan (H.T., A.Y.); Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of...

2. Cardiovascular Center, Kumamoto Saiseikai Hospital, Kumamoto, Japan.

3. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of Medicine, Jichi Medical University School of Medicine, Tochigi, Japan.

4. Teikyo University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.

5. Department of Health Science, Shiga University of Medical Science, Otsu, Japan.

6. Department of Family Medicine, Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada.

7. Osaka City University, Osaka, Japan.

8. Cardiovascular Institute Japan, Tokyo, Japan.

Abstract

An individual participant data meta-analysis was conducted in the data of 14 673 Japanese participants without a history of cardiovascular disease (CVD) to examine the association of the brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity (baPWV) with the risk of development of CVD. During the average 6.4-year follow-up period, 687 participants died and 735 developed cardiovascular events. A higher baPWV was significantly associated with a higher risk of CVD, even after adjustments for conventional risk factors ( P for trend <0.001). When the baPWV values were classified into quintiles, the multivariable-adjusted hazard ratio for CVD increased significantly as the baPWV quintile increased. The hazard ratio in the subjects with baPWV values in quintile 5 versus that in those with the values in quintile 1 was 3.50 (2.14–5.74; P <0.001). Every 1 SD increase of the baPWV was associated with a 1.19-fold (1.10–1.29; P <0.001) increase in the risk of CVD. Moreover, addition of baPWV to a model incorporating the Framingham risk score significantly increased the C statistics from 0.8026 to 0.8131 ( P <0.001) and also improved the category-free net reclassification (0.247; P <0.001). The present meta-analysis clearly established baPWV as an independent predictor of the risk of development of CVD in Japanese subjects without preexisting CVD. Thus, measurement of the baPWV could enhance the efficacy of prediction of the risk of development of CVD over that of the Framingham risk score, which is based on the traditional cardiovascular risk factors.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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