KMID : 1038520230450010088
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Epidemiology and Health 2023 Volume.45 No. 1 p.88 ~ p.88
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Changes in proteinuria and the associated risks of ischemic heart disease, acute myocardial infarction, and angina pectoris in Korean population
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Park Sung-Keun
Jung Ju-Young Kim Min-Ho Oh Chang-Mo Ha Eun-Hee Yang Eun-Hye Lee Hyo-Choon Shin Soon-Su Hwang Woo-Yeon Lee Sang-Ho Shin So-Youn Ryoo Jae-Hong
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Abstract
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OBJECTIVES : Proteinuria is widely used to predict cardiovascular risk. However, there is insufficient evidence to predict how changes in proteinuria may affect the incidence of cardiovascular disease.
METHODS : The study included 265,236 Korean adults who underwent health checkups in 2003-2004 and 2007-2008. They were categorized into 4 groups based on changes in proteinuria (negative: negative ¡æ negative; resolved: proteinuria ¡Ã1+ ¡æ negative; incident: negative ¡æ proteinuria ¡Ã1+; persistent: proteinuria ¡Ã1+ ¡æ proteinuria ¡Ã1+). We conducted 6 years of follow-up to identify the risks of developing ischemic heart disease (IHD), acute myocardial infarction (AMI), and angina pectoris according to changes in proteinuria. A multivariate Cox proportional-hazards model was used to calculate adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for incident IHD, AMI, and angina pectoris.
RESULTS : The IHD risk (expressed as HR [95% CI]) was the highest for persistent proteinuria, followed in descending order by incident and resolved proteinuria, compared with negative proteinuria (negative: reference, resolved: 1.211 [95% CI, 1.104 to 1.329], incident: 1.288 [95% CI, 1.184 to 1.400], and persistent: 1.578 [95% CI, 1.324 to 1.881]). The same pattern was associated with AMI (negative: reference, resolved: 1.401 [95% CI, 1.048 to 1.872], incident: 1.606 [95% CI, 1.268 to 2.035], and persistent: 2.069 [95% CI, 1.281 to 3.342]) and angina pectoris (negative: reference, resolved: 1.184 [95% CI, 1.065 to 1.316], incident: 1.275 [95% CI, 1.160 to 1.401], and persistent: 1.554 [95% CI, 1.272 to 1.899]).
CONCLUSIONS : Experiencing proteinuria increased the risks of IHD, AMI, and angina pectoris even after proteinuria resolved.
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KEYWORD
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Angina pectoris, Myocardial infarction, Myocardial ischemia, Proteinuria
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