articleJAMAMar 20, 2007Closed access

One-Year Cardiovascular Event Rates in Outpatients With Atherothrombosis

Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 · Hôpital Bichat-Claude-Bernard · +10 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Objective

To establish contemporary, international, 1-year CV event rates in outpatients with established arterial disease or with multiple risk factors for atherothrombosis. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: The Reduction of Atherothrombosis for Continued Health (REACH) Registry is an international, prospective cohort of 68 236 patients with either established atherosclerotic arterial disease (CAD, PAD, CVD; n = 55 814) or at least 3 risk factors for atherothrombosis (n = 12 422), who were enrolled from 5587 physician practices in 44 countries in 2003-2004. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Rates of CV death, myocardial infarction (MI), and stroke.

Results

As of July 2006, 1-year outcomes were available for 95.22% (n = 64 977) of participants. Cardiovascular death, MI, or stroke rates were 4.24% overall: 4.69% for those with established atherosclerotic arterial disease vs 2.15% for patients with multiple risk factors only. Among patients with established disease, CV death, MI, or stroke rates were 4.52% for patients with CAD, 6.47% for patients with CVD, and 5.35% for patients with PAD. The incidences of the end point of CV death, MI, or stroke or of hospitalization for atherothrombotic event(s) were 15.20% for CAD, 14.53% for CVD, and 21.14% for PAD patients with established disease. These event rates increased with the number of symptomatic arterial disease locations, ranging from 5.31% for patients with risk factors only to 12.58% for patients with 1, 21.14% for patients with 2, and 26.27% for patients with 3 symptomatic arterial disease locations (P

Citation impact

1,371
total citations
FWCI
93.04
Percentile
100%
References
36
Citations per year

Authors

13

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Myocardial infarction
  • Internal medicine
  • Stroke (engine)
  • Coronary artery disease
  • Cardiology
  • Cohort
  • Disease
No related works found for this paper.