Concerns may be unfounded for risks of earlier-onset cardiovascular disease in men with hemophilia A, according to investigators.
Cardiovascular comorbidities between groups were generally comparable, regardless of hemophilia A status, reported lead author Thomas J. Humphries, MD, of Bayer, and his colleagues.
“To date, there have been conflicting data in the literature regarding the risks of [cardiovascular] comorbidities in patients with hemophilia A, compared with the general population,” the investigators wrote in Advances in Medical Sciences. “Some studies have reported lower mortality from [cardiovascular] diseases and/or decreased atherogenesis in patients with hemophilia … conversely, other reports indicate comparable or higher [cardiovascular] comorbidities in patients with hemophilia, compared with the general population.”
In two previous commercial database reviews conducted by Dr. Humphries and his colleagues, cardiovascular disease appeared to occur more commonly and at a younger age in men with hemophilia A. More concerning, patients aged under 40 years showed elevated incidence of stroke and thrombosis. The authors sought to clarify these findings in the present study.
The retrospective chart review involved 74 men with hemophilia A and 222 men without the condition, matched by study year, payer type, race, and age. Patients presented at any of 31 medical facilities within the Henry Ford Health System in Detroit. Diagnoses were made between Jan. 1, 1995, and Dec. 31, 2014.
For the most part there were no significant differences in cardiovascular disease prevalence between the two cohorts. Rates of hypertension, obesity, coronary artery disease, heart failure, stroke, venous and arterial thrombosis, ventricular arrhythmias, atrial fibrillation, and chronic renal disease were numerically higher in the control group, but those differences were not statistically significant. There were significantly higher prevalence rates for diabetes (P = .0108) and hyperlipidemia (P = .0001) in the control group versus patients with hemophilia A.
The investigators pointed out that meaningful statistical differences using standardized differences were not reached for venous and arterial thrombosis and atrial fibrillation.
“It is worth noting that in the hemophilia A group, hypertension appeared first in the 18- to 29-year age group, as did venous thrombosis,” the investigators wrote, suggesting that monitoring, starting in the late teens, may be warranted.
The investigators also noted multiple study limitations, notably the small sample size, compared with commercial databases that were reviewed in previous studies. Additionally, the severity of disease was unknown for some of the hemophilia A patients and the study only followed patients for 1 year.
“The results of this retrospective chart review did not confirm diffuse statistically significant differences in [cardiovascular] comorbidities and their earlier onset in hemophilia A versus controls,” the investigators concluded.
The study was funded by Bayer. Three of the authors were employed by Bayer when the study was conducted. Other authors reported employment with Xcenda and the Henry Ford Health System and research funding from Xcenda.
SOURCE: Humphries TJ et al. Adv Med Sci. 2018;63(2):329-33.