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AHA: COPD Doubles Sudden Cardiac Death Risk in Hypertensives

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Key clinical point: Two large studies link chronic obstructive pulmonary disease with increased risk of sudden cardiac death.

Major finding: Patients with COPD and hypertension had nearly a twofold increased risk of sudden cardiac death, compared with hypertensives without the pulmonary disease.

Data source: This was a secondary analysis comparing sudden cardiac death rates in 385 hypertensive patients with and nearly 12,000 without COPD, all participants in the LIFE trial.

Disclosures: The presenter reported serving as a consultant to Novartis.


 

AT THE AHA SCIENTIFIC SESSIONS

References

ORLANDO – A second, confirmatory major study has shown that chronic obstructive pulmonary disease independently increases the risk of sudden cardiac death severalfold.

COPD was associated with a roughly twofold increased risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD) in hypertensive patients with COPD, compared with those without the pulmonary disease, in the Scandinavian Losartan Intervention for Endpoint Reduction in Hypertension (LIFE) trial, Dr. Peter M. Okin reported at the American Heart Association scientific sessions.

Peter M. Okin

Peter M. Okin

Moreover, aggressive blood pressure lowering in the hypertensive COPD patients didn’t negate this risk, added Dr. Okin of Cornell University in New York.

The impetus for his secondary analysis of LIFE data was an earlier report from the landmark, population-based Rotterdam Heart Study. Among 1,615 participants with COPD, the age- and sex-adjusted risk of SCD was 1.34-fold greater than in nearly 12,000 controls. This increased SCD risk climbed to 2.12-fold during the first 2,000 days following diagnosis of COPD and reached 3.58-fold among those with frequent COPD exacerbations during this period (Eur Heart J. 2015 Jul 14;36[27]:1754-61).

Dr. Okin’s secondary analysis of LIFE data included 9,193 hypertensive subjects with ECG evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy who were randomized to lisinopril- or atenolol-based blood pressure lowering to a target of 140/90 mm Hg or less. A history of COPD was present in 385 patients (4.2%) at enrollment.

During a mean 4.8 years of prospective follow-up, 178 patients experienced SCD, a prespecified secondary endpoint in the LIFE trial. The incidence rate was 9 cases per 1,000 patient-years in those with COPD and 3.8 per 1,000 person-years in those without the pulmonary disease.

In a univariate analysis, a history of COPD was associated with a 2.36-fold increased risk of SCD during follow-up. In a multivariate analysis extensively adjusted for potential confounders – treatment arm, age, race, gender, history of atrial fibrillation, baseline serum creatinine and serum glucose, stroke or TIA, as well as on-treatment blood pressure, heart rate, QRS duration, HDL cholesterol level, use of a statin or hydrochlorothiazide, and incident MI or heart failure – COPD remained associated with a 1.82-fold increased risk of SCD, the cardiologist reported.

“These results suggest the need for additional studies to assess whether there are targeted therapies that can reduce the risk of SCD in patients with COPD,” he concluded.

As previously reported, the main finding in LIFE was that losartan conferred benefits beyond blood pressure control (Lancet. 2002 Mar 23;359[9311]:995-1003).

Dr. Okin reported serving as a consultant to Novartis.

bjancin@frontlinemedcom.com

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