Associations between dyspnoea, coronary atherosclerosis, and cardiovascular outcomes: results from the long-term follow-up CONFIRM registry
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging

Abstract
The relationship between dyspnoea, coronary artery disease (CAD), and major cardiovascular events (MACE) is poorly understood. This study evaluated (i) the association of dyspnoea with the severity of anatomical CAD by coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) and (ii) to which extent CAD explains MACE in patients with dyspnoea.
From the international COronary CT Angiography EvaluatioN for Clinical Outcomes: An InteRnational Multicenter (CONFIRM) registry, 4425 patients (750 with dyspnoea) with suspected but without known CAD were included and prospectively followed for ≥5 years. First, the association of dyspnoea with CAD severity was assessed using logistic regression analysis. Second, the prognostic value of dyspnoea for MACE (myocardial infarction and death), and specifically, the interaction between dyspnoea and CAD severity was investigated using Cox proportional-hazard analysis. Mean patient age was 60.3 ± 11.9 years, 63% of patients were male and 592 MACE events occurred during a median follow-up duration of 5.4 (IQR 5.1–6.0) years. On uni- and multivariable analysis (adjusting for age, sex, body mass index, chest pain typicality, and risk factors), dyspnoea was associated with two- and three-vessel/left main (LM) obstructive CAD. The presence of dyspnoea increased the risk for MACE [hazard ratio (HR) 1.57, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.29–1.90], which was modified after adjusting for clinical predictors and CAD severity (HR 1.26, 95% CI: 1.02–1.55). Conversely, when stratified by CAD severity, dyspnoea did not provide incremental prognostic value in one-, two-, or three-vessel/LM obstructive CAD, but dyspnoea did provide incremental prognostic value in non-obstructive CAD.
In patients with suspected CAD, dyspnoea was independently associated with severe obstructive CAD on CCTA. The severity of obstructive CAD explained the elevated MACE rates in patients presenting with dyspnoea, but in patients with non-obstructive CAD, dyspnoea portended additional risk.
Contributors

Alexander R van Rosendael
Author

A Maxim Bax
Author

Inge J van den Hoogen
Author

Jeff M Smit
Author

Subhi J Al’Aref
Author

Stephan Achenbach
Author

Mouaz H Al-Mallah
Author

Daniele Andreini
Author

Daniel S Berman
Author

Matthew J Budoff
Author

Filippo Cademartiri
Author

Tracy Q Callister
Author

Hyuk-Jae Chang
Author

Kavitha Chinnaiyan
Author

Benjamin J W Chow
Author

Ricardo C Cury
Author

Augustin DeLago
Author

Gudrun Feuchtner
Author

Martin Hadamitzky
Author

Joerg Hausleiter
Author

Philipp A Kaufmann
Author

Yong-Jin Kim
Author

Jonathon A Leipsic
Author

Erica Maffei
Author

Hugo Marques
Author

Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves
Author

Gianluca Pontone
Author

Gilbert L Raff
Author

Ronen Rubinshtein
Author

Todd C Villines
Author

Heidi Gransar
Author

Yao Lu
Author

Jessica M Peña
Author

Fay Y Lin
Author

Leslee J Shaw
Author

Jagat Narula
Author

James K Min
Author


