Is newly diagnosed cancer associated with increased anatomical severity of coronary artery disease, and does inflammation affect this relationship?
1,496 patients who underwent coronary angiography (CAG), including 374 with newly diagnosed cancer (without previous anti-cancer therapy) and 1,122 non-cancer patients matched 1:3 by age and gender. Mean age 65.7, 74.3% male, based in China. Excluded: infection, autoinflammatory diseases, previous percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) or coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG).
Newly diagnosed cancer (observational exposure)
Non-cancer patients (1:3 propensity score matched by age and gender)
Anatomical severity of CAD assessed using SYNTAX score (SXscore) based on coronary angiographic image, specifically high SXscore (>22)surrogate
Newly diagnosed cancer is independently associated with greater anatomical severity of coronary artery disease, an effect that appears to be driven by high systemic inflammation.
BACKGROUND: Cancer and coronary artery disease (CAD) is reported to often co-exist in same individuals, however, whether cancer is directly associated with anatomical severity of CAD is rarely studied. The present study aimed to observe the relationship between newly diagnosed cancer and anatomical severity of CAD, moreover, to investigate effect of inflammation on the relationship of cancer with CAD. METHODS: 374 patients with newly diagnosed cancer who underwent coronary angiography (CAG) were enrolled. Through 1:3 propensity score matching (PSM) to cancer patients based on the age and gender among 51,106 non-cancer patients who underwent CAG, 1122 non-cancer patients were selected as control patients. Anatomical severity of CAD was assessed using SYNTAX score (SXscore) based on coronary angiographic image. SXscore ≤ 22 (highest quartile) was defined as SX-low, and SXscore > 22 as SX-high. The ratio of neutrophil to lymphocyte count (NLR) was used to describe inflammation level. Association between cancer and the anatomical severity of CAD was investigated using logistic regression. RESULTS: Univariate logistic regression analysis showed a correlation between cancer and anatomical severity of CAD (OR: 1.419, 95% CI: 1.083-1.859; P = 0.011). Cancer was associated with increased risk of SX-high after adjusted for common risk factors of CAD (OR: 1.598, 95% CI: 1.172-2.179, P = 0.003). Significant association between cancer and SX-high was revealed among patients with high inflammation (OR: 1.656, 95% CI: 1.099-2.497, P = 0.016), but not among patients with low inflammation (OR: 1.530, 95% CI: 0.973-2.498, P = 0.089). CONCLUSIONS: Cancer was associated with severity of CAD, however, the association between the two diseases was significant among patients with high inflammation rather than among patients with low inflammation.
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Sun et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1a30b2db849bfdc47fca27 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12872-023-03613-0
Mingzhuang Sun
Chinese PLA General Hospital
Shaoning Zhu
Chinese PLA General Hospital
Yihao Wang
Ludwig Cancer Research
BMC Cardiovascular Disorders
Peking University
Chinese PLA General Hospital
Aerospace Center Hospital
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