A Risk Stratification Scheme for In-Hospital Cardiogenic Shock in Patients With Acute Myocardial Infarction

Author:

Yang Jun-qing,Ran Peng,Li Jie,Zhong Qi,Smith Sidney C.,Wang Yan,Fonarow Gregg C.,Qiu Jia,Morgan Louise,Wei Xue-biao,Chen Xiao-bo,Huang Jie-leng,Hao Yong-chen,Zhou Ying-ling,Siu Chung-Wah,Zhao Dong,Chen Ji-yan,Yu Dan-qing

Abstract

ObjectiveCardiogenic shock (CS) is the leading cause of death in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) despite advances in care. This study aims to derive and validate a risk score for in-hospital development of CS in patients with AMI.MethodsIn this study, we used the Improving Care for Cardiovascular Disease in China–Acute Coronary Syndrome (CCC–ACS) registry of 76,807 patients for model development and internal validation. These patients came from 158 tertiary hospitals and 82 secondary hospitals between 2014 and 2019, presenting AMI without CS upon admission. The eligible patients with AMI were randomly assigned to derivation (n = 53,790) and internal validation (n = 23,017) cohorts. Another cohort of 2,205 patients with AMI between 2014 and 2016 was used for external validation. Based on the identified predictors for in-hospital CS, a new point-based CS risk scheme, referred to as the CCC–ACS CS score, was developed and validated.ResultsA total of 866 (1.1%) and 39 (1.8%) patients subsequently developed in-hospital CS in the CCC–ACS project and external validation cohort, respectively. The CCC–ACS CS score consists of seven variables, including age, acute heart failure upon admission, systolic blood pressure upon admission, heart rate, initial serum creatine kinase-MB level, estimated glomerular filtration rate, and mechanical complications. The area under the curve for in-hospital development of CS was 0.73, 0.71, and 0.85 in the derivation, internal validation and external validation cohorts, respectively.ConclusionThis newly developed CCC–ACS CS score can quantify the risk of in-hospital CS for patients with AMI, which may help in clinical decision making.Clinical Trial Registrationwww.ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier: NCT02306616.

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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