Left ventricular hypertrophy and risk reclassification for coronary events in multi-ethnic adults
European Journal of Preventive Cardiology

Abstract
Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) has not been evaluated for reclassification improvement in the intermediate Framingham risk category for incident hard coronary events in a large multi ethnic population free of cardiovascular disease at baseline.
A post-hoc analysis on the Multi Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA) dataset (
LVH was defined as the upper 95 th percentile of cardiac magnetic resonance imaging derived left ventricular mass (LVM) indexed based on body surface area (BSA) and height. Multivariate Cox proportional hazards models were used to assess the independent association between LVH and composite outcomes like all cardiovascular disease (CVDa) and hard coronary heart disease (CHDh) events over a mean follow-up period of 4.5 years. To assess the incremental value of LVH over traditional CV risk factors for CHDh prediction, we compared the discrimination, calibration and net reclassification index (NRI) of models comprising of traditional CV risk factors with and without LVH.
LVH derived from LVM indexed by BSA (LVH-BSA) and height1.7(LVH-height) showed an independent association with CVDa (LVH-BSA: hazard ratio (HR) 1.52, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.05–2.20,
Although an independent predictor of cardiovascular events, LVH does not lead to clinically meaningful reclassification of the overall and intermediate risk population for CHDh.
Contributors

Sandip K Zalawadiya
Author

Prasad C Gunasekaran
Author

Chirag P Bavishi
Author

Vikas Veeranna
Author

Sidakpal Panaich
Author
