作者
Kobina Hagan,Reed Mszar,Miguel Cainzos‐Achirica,Michael J. Blaha,Michael D. Shapiro,Lara Arias,Anshul Saxena,Ricardo Cury,Matthew J. Budoff,Theodore Feldman,Jonathan Fialkow,Sadeer Al‐Kindi,Khurram Nasir
摘要
Background and aims The interplay between low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (LDL-C) and coronary plaque in asymptomatic cohorts undergoing coronary tomography angiography (CCTA) assessment in the United States is not well described. Methods Cross-sectional analysis of baseline data from 1,808 statin-naïve participants in the Miami Heart Study. We assessed CCTA-detected atherosclerosis (any plaque, noncalcified plaque, maximal stenosis ≥50%, high-risk plaque) across LDL-C levels, coronary artery calcium (CAC) scores (0, 1-99, ≥100), and 10-year cardiovascular risk categories. Results Atherosclerosis presence varied across LDL-C levels: 40% of those with LDL-C ≥190 mg/dL had no coronary plaque, while 33% with LDL-C <70 mg/dL had plaque (22.4% with noncalcified plaque). Among those with CAC 0, plaque prevalence ranged from 13.2% (LDL-C <70 mg/dL) to 28.2% (LDL-C ≥190 mg/dL), noncalcified plaque from 13.2% to 25.6%, stenosis ≥50% from 0 to 2.6%, and high-risk plaque from 0 to 5.1%. Conversely, with CAC ≥100, all had coronary plaque, with noncalcified plaque prevalence ranging from 25.0% (LDL-C <70 mg/dL) to 83.3% (LDL-C ≥190 mg/dL), stenosis ≥50% from 25.0% to 50.0%, and high-risk plaque from 0 to 66.7%. Among low-risk participants, 76.7% had CAC 0, yet 31.5% had any plaque and 18.3% had noncalcified plaque. Positive trends between LDL-C and any plaque (17.9% to 45.2%) or noncalcified plaque (12.8% to 23.8%) were observed in the low-risk group, but no clear trends were seen in higher-risk groups. Conclusions Heterogeneity exists in subclinical atherosclerosis across LDL-C, CAC, and estimated cardiovascular risk levels. The value of CCTA in risk-stratifying asymptomatic adults could be explored further.