Adult asthmatics increase the risk of acute coronary syndrome: A nationwide population-based cohort study.

Link to article at PubMed

Adult asthmatics increase the risk of acute coronary syndrome: A nationwide population-based cohort study.

Eur J Intern Med. 2014 Nov 1;

Authors: Chung WS, Shen TC, Lin CL, Chu YH, Hsu WH, Kao CH

Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Few studies have examined the risk of acute coronary syndrome (ACS) in asthmatics. We investigate the effects of asthma on the risk of ACS development in an Asian population.
METHODS: Asthma patients aged ≥18years were identified, and asthma-free controls were randomly selected from the general population and frequency-matched according to age, sex, index year, and baseline comorbidity by using the National Health Insurance Research Database. Both cohorts were followed up until the end of 2011 to measure the incidence of ACS. The risk of ACS was analyzed using Cox proportional hazards regression models.
RESULTS: We observed the asthmatic patients for 97,506person-years and followed the nonasthmatic people for 193,423person-years. The incidence density rate of ACS increased in all groups of the asthmatic patients compared with those of the controls when the data were stratified according to sex, age, and comorbidities. The hazard ratio (HR) of ACS was 1.66-fold greater in the asthmatic cohort than in the nonasthmatic cohort, after adjusting for sex, age, and comorbidities (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.31-2.11). The adjusted HR of developing ACS increased substantially as age and the frequency of asthmatic exacerbation and hospitalization increased.
CONCLUSIONS: Asthma is an independent risk factor of ACS, and poor control of asthma increases the risk of ACS development in a dose-dependent manner.

PMID: 25468246 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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