Estimated pulse wave velocity improves risk stratification for all-cause mortality in patients with COVID-19

Author:

Stamatelopoulos Kimon,Georgiopoulos Georgios,Baker Kenneth F.,Tiseo Giusy,Delialis Dimitrios,Lazaridis Charalampos,Barbieri Greta,Masi Stefano,Vlachogiannis Nikolaos I.,Sopova Kateryna,Mengozzi Alessandro,Ghiadoni Lorenzo,van der Loeff Ina Schim,Hanrath Aidan T.,Ajdini Bajram,Vlachopoulos Charalambos,Dimopoulos Meletios A.,Duncan Christopher J. A.,Falcone Marco,Stellos Konstantinos,Tiseo Giusy,Barbieri Greta,Masi Stefano,Mengozzi Alessandro,Ghiadoni Lorenzo,Falcone Marco,Monzani Fabio,Menichetti Francesco,Virdis Agostino,Forfori Francesco,Rubia Baldassarri,Pietro Bertini,Giulia Brizzi,Francesco Corradi,Alessandra Della Rocca,Fabio Guarracino,Paolo Malacarne,Marco Monfroni,Chiara Piagnani,Naria Park,Alessandro Celi,Carrozzi Laura,Francesco Cinotti,Santini Massimo,Alessandro Cipriano,Martina Biancalana,Matteo Borselli,Elia Nencini,Stefano Spinelli,Francesca Ruberti,Giovanna Forotti,Maria Sciuto,De Marco Salvatore,Rachele Antognoli,Valeria Calsolario,Simone Paterni,Luciano Colangelo,Chiara Sonato,Valentina Galfo,Uliana Monica,Baker Kenneth F.,van der Loeff Ina Schim,Hanrath Aidan T.,Duncan Christopher J. A.,Tee Su Ann,Capstick Richard,Marchitelli Gabriella,Li Ang,Barr Andrew,Eid Alsafi,Ahmed Sajeel,Bajwa Dalvir,Mohammed Omer, ,

Abstract

AbstractAccurate risk stratification in COVID-19 patients consists a major clinical need to guide therapeutic strategies. We sought to evaluate the prognostic role of estimated pulse wave velocity (ePWV), a marker of arterial stiffness which reflects overall arterial integrity and aging, in risk stratification of hospitalized patients with COVID-19. This retrospective, longitudinal cohort study, analyzed a total population of 1671 subjects consisting of 737 hospitalized COVID-19 patients consecutively recruited from two tertiary centers (Newcastle cohort: n = 471 and Pisa cohort: n = 266) and a non-COVID control cohort (n = 934). Arterial stiffness was calculated using validated formulae for ePWV. ePWV progressively increased across the control group, COVID-19 survivors and deceased patients (adjusted mean increase per group 1.89 m/s, P < 0.001). Using a machine learning approach, ePWV provided incremental prognostic value and improved reclassification for mortality over the core model including age, sex and comorbidities [AUC (core model + ePWV vs. core model) = 0.864 vs. 0.755]. ePWV provided similar prognostic value when pulse pressure or hs-Troponin were added to the core model or over its components including age and mean blood pressure (p < 0.05 for all). The optimal prognostic ePWV value was 13.0 m/s. ePWV conferred additive discrimination (AUC: 0.817 versus 0.779, P < 0.001) and reclassification value (NRI = 0.381, P < 0.001) over the 4C Mortality score, a validated score for predicting mortality in COVID-19 and the Charlson comorbidity index. We suggest that calculation of ePWV, a readily applicable estimation of arterial stiffness, may serve as an additional clinical tool to refine risk stratification of hospitalized patients with COVID-19 beyond established risk factors and scores.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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