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The metabolic syndrome and risk of major coronary events in the Scandinavian
Simvastatin Survival Study (4S) and the Air Force/Texas Coronary
Atherosclerosis Prevention Study (AFCAPS/TexCAPS) [In Process Citation] |
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Am J Cardiol 2004 Jan 15;93(2):136-41 (ISSN: 0002-9149)Girman CJ; Rhodes T; Mercuri M; Pyorala K; Kjekshus J; Pedersen TR; Beere
PA; Gotto AM; Clearfield M [Find other articles with these Authors]
Departments of Epidemiology, Merck Research Laboratories, West Point,
Pennsylvania, USA.
The metabolic syndrome, which is a set of lipid and nonlipid risk factors of
metabolic origin linked with insulin resistance, is believed to be
associated with an elevated risk for cardiovascular disease, but few have
studied this association in prospective long-term cardiovascular outcomes
trials. Placebo data from the Scandinavian Simvastatin Survival Study (4S)
and the Air Force/Texas Coronary Atherosclerosis Prevention Study
(AFCAPS/TexCAPS) were used post hoc to estimate the long-term relative risk
of major coronary events (MCEs) associated with the metabolic syndrome,
after excluding diabetes mellitus. In 4S and AFCAPS/TexCAPS, respectively,
placebo-treated patients with the metabolic syndrome were 1.5 (95%
confidence interval 1.2 to 1.8) and 1.4 (95% confidence interval 1.04 to
1.9) times more likely to have MCEs than those without it. Of the components
of the metabolic syndrome, low high-density lipoprotein levels were
associated with elevated risk of MCEs in both studies, whereas high
triglycerides in 4S and elevated blood pressure and obesity in
AFCAPS/TexCAPS were associated with significantly increased relative risk.
Patients with the metabolic syndrome showed increased risk of MCEs
irrespective of their Framingham-calculated 10-year risk score category
(>20% vs </=20%). These data demonstrate that the metabolic syndrome is
associated with increased risk of MCEs in both hypercholesterolemic patients
with coronary heart disease in 4S and in those with low high-density
lipoprotein cholesterol but without coronary heart disease in
AFCAPS/TexCAPS. It appears that the metabolic syndrome is associated with
risk that is not entirely accounted for by traditional risk scoring
paradigms.
Language: English
MEDLINE Indexing Date: 200401
Publication Type: Owner: NLM; Status: In-Data-Review
Publication Type: Journal Article
PMID: 0014715336
Journal Code: AIM; IM
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