Predicting risk of cardiovascular events 1 to 3 years post-myocardial infarction using a global registry

  • Stuart J Pocock
  • David Brieger
  • John Gregson
  • Ji Y Chen
  • Mauricio G Cohen
  • Shaun G Goodman
  • Christopher B Granger
  • Richard Grieve
  • Jose C Nicolau
  • Tabassome Simon
  • Dirk Westermann
  • Satoshi Yasuda
  • Katarina Hedman
  • Kirsten L Rennie
  • Karolina Andersson Sundell
  • TIGRIS Study Investigators

Related Research units

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Risk prediction tools are lacking for patients with stable disease some years after myocardial infarction (MI).

HYPOTHESIS: A practical long-term cardiovascular risk index can be developed.

METHODS: The long-Term rIsk, Clinical manaGement and healthcare Resource utilization of stable coronary artery dISease in post-myocardial infarction patients prospective global registry enrolled patients 1 to 3 years post-MI (369 centers; 25 countries), all with ≥1 risk factor (age ≥65 years, diabetes mellitus requiring medication, second prior MI, multivessel coronary artery disease, or chronic non-end-stage kidney disease [CKD]). Self-reported health was assessed with EuroQoL-5 dimensions. Multivariable Poisson regression models were used to determine key predictors of the primary composite outcome (MI, unstable angina with urgent revascularization [UA], stroke, or all-cause death) over 2 years.

RESULTS: The primary outcome occurred in 621 (6.9%) of 9027 eligible patients: death 295 (3.3%), MI 195 (2.2%), UA 103 (1.1%), and stroke 58 (0.6%). All events accrued linearly. In a multivariable model, 11 significant predictors of primary outcome (age ≥65 years, diabetes, second prior MI, CKD, history of major bleed, peripheral arterial disease, heart failure, cardiovascular hospitalization (prior 6 months), medical management (index MI), on diuretic, and poor self-reported health) were identified and combined into a user-friendly risk index. Compared with lowest-risk patients, those in the top 16% had a rate ratio of 6.9 for the primary composite, and 18.7 for all-cause death (overall c-statistic; 0.686, and 0.768, respectively). External validation was performed using the Australian Cooperative National Registry of Acute Coronary Care, Guideline Adherence and Clinical Events registry (c-statistic; 0.748, and 0.849, respectively).

CONCLUSIONS: In patients >1-year post-MI, recurrent cardiovascular events and deaths accrue linearly. A simple risk index can stratify patients, potentially helping to guide management.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN0160-9289
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.2020
PubMed 31713893