Background:Cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk assessment remains a critical step in guiding decisions to initiate primary prevention interventions in people living with HIV (PLWH).Setting:We investigated whether coronary artery calcium (CAC) scoring allowed a more accurate selection of patients who may benefit from statin therapy, compared with current risk assessment tools alone.Methods:Cross-sectional analysis of PLWH over 50 years old who underwent CAC scoring between 2009 and 2019. Framingham Risk score (FRS), QRISK2 and D:A:D scores were calculated for each participant at the time of CAC scoring and statin eligibility determined based on current European guidelines on the prevention of CVD in PLWH.Results:A total of 739 patients were included (mean age 56 ± 5, 92.8% male, 84% white). Among 417 (56.4%) candidates for statin therapy based on FRS ≥10%, 174 (23.5%) had no detectable calcification (CAC = 0). Conversely, 145 (19.6%) patients with detectable calcification (CAC > 0) were identified as low-risk (FRS < 10%). When compared with FRS, CAC scoring reclassified CVD risk in 43.1% of patients, 145 (19.6%) to a higher risk group that could benefit from statin therapy and 174 (23.5%) statin candidates to a lower risk group. QRISK2 and D:A:D scores performed similarly to FRS, underestimating the presence of significant coronary calcification in 21.1% and 24.9% respectively and overestimating risk in 16.9% and 18.8% patients with CAC = 0.Conclusions:Establishing a decision-model based on the combination of conventional risk tools and CAC scoring improves risk assessment and the selection of PLWH who would benefit from statin therapy.
Pereira, B., Mazzitelli, M., Milinkovic, A., Moyle, G., Ranasinghe, S., Mandalia, S., Pozniak, A., Asboe, D., Nelson, M., Al-Hussaini, A., Boffito, M., Use of Coronary Artery Calcium Scoring to Improve Cardiovascular Risk Stratification and Guide Decisions to Start Statin Therapy in People Living With HIV, <<JOURNAL OF ACQUIRED IMMUNE DEFICIENCY SYNDROMES>>, 2020; 85 (1): 98-105. [doi:10.1097/QAI.0000000000002400] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/338501]
Use of Coronary Artery Calcium Scoring to Improve Cardiovascular Risk Stratification and Guide Decisions to Start Statin Therapy in People Living With HIV
Mazzitelli, MariaSecondo
;
2020
Abstract
Background:Cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk assessment remains a critical step in guiding decisions to initiate primary prevention interventions in people living with HIV (PLWH).Setting:We investigated whether coronary artery calcium (CAC) scoring allowed a more accurate selection of patients who may benefit from statin therapy, compared with current risk assessment tools alone.Methods:Cross-sectional analysis of PLWH over 50 years old who underwent CAC scoring between 2009 and 2019. Framingham Risk score (FRS), QRISK2 and D:A:D scores were calculated for each participant at the time of CAC scoring and statin eligibility determined based on current European guidelines on the prevention of CVD in PLWH.Results:A total of 739 patients were included (mean age 56 ± 5, 92.8% male, 84% white). Among 417 (56.4%) candidates for statin therapy based on FRS ≥10%, 174 (23.5%) had no detectable calcification (CAC = 0). Conversely, 145 (19.6%) patients with detectable calcification (CAC > 0) were identified as low-risk (FRS < 10%). When compared with FRS, CAC scoring reclassified CVD risk in 43.1% of patients, 145 (19.6%) to a higher risk group that could benefit from statin therapy and 174 (23.5%) statin candidates to a lower risk group. QRISK2 and D:A:D scores performed similarly to FRS, underestimating the presence of significant coronary calcification in 21.1% and 24.9% respectively and overestimating risk in 16.9% and 18.8% patients with CAC = 0.Conclusions:Establishing a decision-model based on the combination of conventional risk tools and CAC scoring improves risk assessment and the selection of PLWH who would benefit from statin therapy.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



