From the Journals

Ask patients, not devices, about impact of PAD


 

FROM THE JOURNAL OF VASCULAR SURGERY

The ankle-brachial index (ABI) is a poor indicator of patient-centered and clinician-based evaluations of functional status in patients with intermittent claudication, according to the results of PORTRAIT, a prospective observational study of patients with newly diagnosed or an exacerbation of nonlimb-threatening peripheral arterial disease (PAD).

PORTRAIT studied 1,251 patients with intermittent claudication enrolled at 16 sites. Researchers studied the correlation of ABI values and Rutherford symptom classification with PAD-specific health status as measured by the Peripheral Artery Questionnaire (PAQ).

ABI values were categorized as mild (greater than 0.80), moderate (0.40-0.79), and severe (less than 0.40). Spearman rank correlation coefficients were calculated between raw ABI values and PAQ scores and between the Rutherford classification and PAQ scores.

ABI explained only 0.1%-2.1% of the variation in PAQ scores and the Rutherford classification had stronger but still modest associations with PAQ scores, according to the researchers.

“This large study of IC patients found that the PAQ offers a unique and complementary

measure of disease burden that is not captured by physiologic or clinician-observed classifications. The findings from this study highlight the clinical complexity of PAD

and the difficulty in using common hemodynamic and symptom measures to classify the impact of this disease on patients’ health status,” the researchers concluded.

Several authors reported serving as consultant for and/or receiving grants from various device and pharmaceutical companies involved with PAD. The senior author. owns the copyright to the Peripheral Artery Questionnaire that formed the basis for the study.

SOURCE: Johnston A et al. J Vasc Surg. 2018;69(3):906-12.

Recommended Reading

COPD linked to higher in-hospital death rates in patients with PAD
MDedge Cardiology
New twists in medical management of PAD
MDedge Cardiology
Life’s Simple 7 tied to lowered PAD risk in long-term study
MDedge Cardiology
Arterial stiffness index may be potent tool for PAD risk stratification
MDedge Cardiology
PAD tied to higher prevalence of LV diastolic dysfunction
MDedge Cardiology
Diabetic kidney disease, retinopathy associated with PAD in patients with foot ulcers
MDedge Cardiology
Paclitaxel drug-coated balloons appear safe for PAD treatment
MDedge Cardiology
Registry supports efficacy of coated balloon for peripheral artery stenosis
MDedge Cardiology
FDA advises alternatives to paclitaxel-coated devices for PAD, pending review
MDedge Cardiology
What does COMPASS mean for vascular surgeons?
MDedge Cardiology