Association of Disease‐Specific Health Status With Long‐Term Survival in Peripheral Artery Disease

Author:

Tran Andy T.1ORCID,Spertus John A.23ORCID,Mena‐Hurtado Carlos I.4ORCID,Jones Philip G.23ORCID,Aronow Herbert D.5ORCID,Safley David M.23ORCID,Malik Ali O.23ORCID,Peri‐Okonny Poghni A.23ORCID,Shishehbor Mehdi H.6ORCID,Labrosciano Clementine7ORCID,Smolderen Kim G.48ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine University of California Irvine School of Medicine Orange CA

2. Cardiovascular Research Saint Luke’s Mid America Heart Institute Kansas City MO

3. Department of Biomedical and Health Informatics of Medicine University of Missouri–Kansas City Kansas City MO

4. Vascular Medicine Outcomes Program Section of Cardiovascular Medicine Department of Internal Medicine Yale University New Haven CT

5. Department of Medicine Alpert Medical School of Brown University Providence RI

6. Interventional Cardiovascular Center Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine Cleveland OH

7. The Queen Elizabeth Hospital Adelaide Medical School University of Adelaide SA Australia

8. Department of Psychiatry School of Medicine, Yale University New Haven CT

Abstract

Background While peripheral artery disease (PAD) is associated with increased cardiovascular morbidity with mortality remaining high and challenging to predict, accurate understanding of serial PAD‐specific health status around the time of diagnosis may prognosticate long‐term mortality risk. Methods and Results Patients with new or worsening PAD symptoms enrolled in the PORTRAIT Registry across 10 US sites from 2011 to 2015 were included. Health status was assessed by the Peripheral Artery Questionnaire (PAQ) Summary score at baseline, 3‐month, and change from baseline to 3‐month follow‐up. Kaplan‐Meier using 3‐month landmark and hierarchical Cox regression models were constructed to assess the association of the PAQ with 5‐year all‐cause mortality. Of the 711 patients (mean age 68.8±9.6 years, 40.9% female, 72.7% white; mean PAQ 47.5±22.0 and 65.9±25.0 at baseline and 3‐month, respectively), 141 (19.8%) died over a median follow‐up of 4.1 years. In unadjusted models, baseline (HR, 0.90 per‐10‐point increment; 95% CI, 0.84–0.97; P =0.008), 3‐month (HR [95% CI], 0.87 [0.82–0.93]; P <0.001) and change in PAQ (HR [95% CI], 0.92 [0.85–0.99]; P =0.021) were each associated with mortality. In fully adjusted models including combination of scores, 3‐month PAQ was more strongly associated with mortality than either baseline (3‐month HR [95% CI], 0.85 [0.78–0.92]; P <0.001; C‐statistic, 0.77) or change (3‐month HR [95% CI], 0.79 [0.72–0.87]; P <0.001). Conclusions PAD‐specific health status is independently associated with 5‐year survival in patients with new or worsening PAD symptoms, with the most recent assessment being most prognostic. Future work is needed to better understand how this information can be used proactively to optimize care.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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