Author:
Antonio-Villa Neftali Eduardo,Juárez-Rojas Juan Gabriel,Posadas-Sánchez Rosalinda,Reyes-Barrera Juan,Medina-Urrutia Aida
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Coronary artery calcium (CAC) improves cardiovascular event prediction. Visceral adipose tissue (VAT) is a cardiometabolic risk factor that may directly or through its related comorbidities determine the obesity-related risk. A clinical VAT estimator could allow an efficient evaluation of obesity-related risk. We aimed to analyze the effect of VAT and its related cardiometabolic risk factors on CAC progression.
Methods
CAC was quantified at baseline and after 5 years by computed tomography (CT), determining its progression. VAT and pericardial fat were measured by CT and estimated by a clinical surrogate (METS-VF). Considered cardiometabolic risk factors were: peripheral insulin resistance (IR), HOMA-IR, adipose tissue IR (ADIPO-IR), and adiponectin. Factors independently associated to CAC progression were analyzed by adjusted Cox proportional hazard models, including statin use and ASCVD risk score as covariates. We performed interaction and mediation models to propose possible pathways for CAC progression.
Results
The study included 862 adults (53 ± 9 years, 53% women), incidence CAC progression rate: 30.2 (95% CI 25.3–35.8)/1000 person-years. VAT (HR: 1.004, 95% CI 1.001–1.007, p < 0.01) and METS-VF (HR: 1.001, 95% CI 1.0–1.001, p < 0.05) independently predicted CAC progression. VAT-associated CAC progression risk was evident among low-risk ASCVD subjects, and attenuated among medium–high-risk subjects, suggesting that traditional risk factors overcome adiposity in the latter. VAT mediates 51.8% (95% CI 44.5–58.8%) of the effect attributable to IR together with adipose tissue dysfunction on CAC progression.
Conclusions
This study supports the hypothesis that VAT is a mediator of the risk conferred by subcutaneous adipose tissue dysfunction. METS-VF is an efficient clinical surrogate that could facilitate the identification of at-risk adiposity subjects in daily clinical practice.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Cited by
7 articles.
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