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Abstract P221: Metabolic Syndrome And Its Factors Associate With Non-calcified Coronary Plaque Burden In Chronic Inflammation: Results From A Prospective Observational Study

IntroductionPsoriasis is a common, inflammatory skin disease associated with systemic inflammation and heightened risk of cardiovascular diseases (CVD). Population studies have shown that psoriasis is associated with metabolic syndrome (MetSyn) and its individual components. However, the impact of M...

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Published in:Circulation (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2021-05, Vol.143 (Suppl_1), p.AP221-AP221
Main Authors: Teklu, Meron, Zhou, Wunan, Patel, Nidhi, Manyak, Grigory, Dey, Amit K, Lateef, Sundus, Uceda, Domingo, Abdelrahman, Khaled, Rodante, Justin, Keel, Andrew, Machado, Tania, Scott, Colin, Kapoor, Promita, Sorokin, Alexander V, Teague, Heather, Playford, Martin, Chen, Marcus Y, Mehta, Nehal N
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:IntroductionPsoriasis is a common, inflammatory skin disease associated with systemic inflammation and heightened risk of cardiovascular diseases (CVD). Population studies have shown that psoriasis is associated with metabolic syndrome (MetSyn) and its individual components. However, the impact of MetSyn on early atherosclerosis in chronic inflammatory diseases assessed as non-calcified coronary plaque burden (NCB) by coronary computed CT angiography (CCTA) is not known. HypothesisWe hypothesized that those with MetSyn in psoriasis would have increased NCB compared to non-MetSyn and that MetSyn and its components would associate with NCB in fully adjusted models. MethodsThe cohort consisted of 336 psoriasis patients free of cardiovascular disease, of which 326 had adequate data to classify MetSyn based on the International Diabetes Federation criteria (waist circumference, triglycerides, HDL cholesterol, blood pressure and fasting glucose). Of these, 260 had quantitative CCTA data available for analyses (Stata 16). ResultsOf the 260 patients, 80 had MetSyn (31%). The MetSyn group had increased cardiometabolic disease and more adverse coronary characteristics including higher non-calcified (p
ISSN:0009-7322
1524-4539
DOI:10.1161/circ.143.suppl_1.P221