Pulse pressure in acute coronary syndromes: Comparative prognostic significance with systolic blood pressure
European Heart Journal - Acute CardioVascular Care

Abstract
Pulse pressure is a readily available vital sign that has been shown to independently predict outcomes in several cardiovascular disease states. We investigated the prognostic significance of pulse pressure (PP) and systolic blood pressure (SBP) among patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACS).
A total of 14,514 patients with ACS in the prospective, multicentre Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events (GRACE), expanded GRACE (GRACE-2) and Canadian Registry of Acute Coronary Events (CANRACE) were stratified by initial PP on presentation. Patient characteristics and in-hospital outcomes were compared by PP quartiles and the independent prognostic significance of PP for in-hospital mortality was quantified. We compared the discriminative ability (c-statistic) of models incorporating either PP or SBP.
Patients with higher PPs were older, more frequently female and had higher prevalence rates of conventional cardiovascular risk factors (all
Higher presenting PP is associated with increased age and more prevalent cardiovascular risk factors, whereas patients with lower PP present with worse clinical characteristics and in-hospital outcomes. Lower PP is an independent adverse prognosticator in ACS. However, PP did not improve the discriminatory performance of the GRACE risk score compared with SBP.
Contributors

Nigel S Tan
Author

Bradley Sarak
Author

Keith A A Fox
Author

David Brieger
Author

Ph Gabriel Steg
Author

Chris P Gale
Author

Deepak L Bhatt
Author

Frederick A Spencer
Author

Francois R Grondin
Author

Shaun G Goodman
Author

