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Inflammation and Aortic Pulse Wave Velocity: A Multicenter Longitudinal Study in Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Authors :
Antonio Pinto
Pietro Castellino
Santina Cottone
Gaetano Inserra
Kadir Ozturk
Giulio Geraci
Gaia Riguccio
Luca Zanoli
Pasquale Fatuzzo
Pierre Boutouyrie
Andrea Duminuco
Alessandra F. Perna
Stéphane Laurent
Daniele Torres
Musa Baris Aykan
Giuseppe Mulè
Maria Cappello
A. Tuttolomondo
Zanoli, Luca
Ozturk, Kadir
Cappello, Maria
Inserra, Gaetano
Geraci, Giulio
Tuttolomondo, Antonio
Torres, Daniele
Pinto, Antonio
Duminuco, Andrea
Riguccio, Gaia
Aykan, Musa B.
Mulé, Giuseppe
Cottone, Santina
Perna, Alessandra F.
Laurent, Stephane
Fatuzzo, Pasquale
Castellino, Pietro
Boutouyrie, Pierre
Source :
Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
country:US, 2019.

Abstract

Background Inflammatory bowel disease ( IBD ) is characterized by a low prevalence of traditional risk factors, an increased aortic pulse‐wave velocity ( aPWV ), and an excess of cardiovascular events. We have previously hypothesized that the cardiovascular risk excess reported in these patients could be explained by chronic inflammation. Here, we tested the hypothesis that chronic inflammation is responsible for the increased aPWV previously reported in IBD patients and that anti‐TNFa (anti‐tumor necrosis factor‐alpha) therapy reduce aPWV in these patients. Methods and Results This was a multicenter longitudinal study. We enrolled 334 patients: 82 patients with ulcerative colitis, 85 patients with Crohn disease, and 167 healthy control subjects matched for age, sex, and mean blood pressure, from 3 centers in Europe, and followed them for 4 years (range, 2.5–5.7 years). At baseline, IBD patients had higher aPWV than controls. IBD patients in remission and those treated with anti–TNFa during follow‐up experienced an aortic destiffening, whereas aPWV increased in those with active disease and those treated with salicylates ( P =0.01). Disease duration ( P =0.02) was associated with aortic stiffening as was, in patients with ulcerative colitis, high‐sensitivity C‐reactive protein during follow‐up ( P =0.02). All these results were confirmed after adjustment for major confounders. Finally, the duration of anti–TNFa therapy was not associated with the magnitude of the reduction in aPWV at the end of follow‐up ( P =0.85). Conclusions Long‐term anti–TNFa therapy reduces aPWV , an established surrogate measure of cardiovascular risk, in patients with IBD . This suggests that effective control of inflammation may reduce cardiovascular risk in these patients.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ad70d05a90ede18912df70ec0770d82e