- 著者
-
Yousuke Hashimoto
Yukio Ozaki
Shino Kan
Koichi Nakao
Kazuo Kimura
Junya Ako
Teruo Noguchi
Satoru Suwa
Kazuteru Fujimoto
Kazuoki Dai
Takashi Morita
Wataru Shimizu
Yoshihiko Saito
Atsushi Hirohata
Yasuhiro Morita
Teruo Inoue
Atsunori Okamura
Toshiaki Mano
Minoru Wake
Kengo Tanabe
Yoshisato Shibata
Mafumi Owa
Kenichi Tsujita
Hiroshi Funayama
Nobuaki Kokubu
Ken Kozuma
Shiro Uemura
Tetsuya Tobaru
Keijiro Saku
Shigeru Oshima
Satoshi Yasuda
Tevfik F Ismail
Takashi Muramatsu
Hideo Izawa
Hiroshi Takahashi
Kunihiro Nishimura
Yoshihiko Miyamoto
Hisao Ogawa
Masaharu Ishihara
on behalf of J-MINUET Investigators
- 出版者
- The Japanese Circulation Society
- 雑誌
- Circulation Journal (ISSN:13469843)
- 巻号頁・発行日
- pp.CJ-20-1115, (Released:2021-06-03)
- 参考文献数
- 31
- 被引用文献数
-
19
Background:The impact of chronic kidney disease (CKD) on long-term outcomes following acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in the era of modern primary PCI with optimal medical therapy is still in debate.Methods and Results:A total of 3,281 patients with AMI were enrolled in the J-MINUET registry, with primary PCI of 93.1% in STEMI. CKD stage on admission was classified into: no CKD (eGFR ≥60 mL/min/1.73 m2); moderate CKD (60>eGFR≥30 mL/min/1.73 m2); and severe CKD (eGFR <30 mL/min/1.73 m2). While the primary endpoint was all-cause mortality, the secondary endpoint was major adverse cardiac events (MACE), defined as a composite of all-cause death, cardiac failure, myocardial infarction (MI) and stroke. Of the 3,281 patients, 1,878 had no CKD, 1,073 had moderate CKD and 330 had severe CKD. Pre-person-days age- and sex-adjusted in-hospital mortality significantly increased from 0.014% in no CKD through 0.042% in moderate CKD to 0.084% in severe CKD (P<0.0001). Three-year mortality and MACE significantly deteriorated from 5.09% and 15.8% in no CKD through 16.3% and 38.2% in moderate CKD to 36.7% and 57.9% in severe CKD, respectively (P<0.0001). C-index significantly increased from the basic model of 0.815 (0.788–0.841) to 0.831 (0.806–0.857), as well as 0.731 (0.708–0.755) to 0.740 (0.717–0.764) when adding CKD stage to the basic model in predicting 3-year mortality (P=0.013; net reclassification improvement [NRI] 0.486, P<0.0001) and MACE (P=0.046; NRI 0.331, P<0.0001) respectively.Conclusions:CKD remains a useful predictor of in-hospital and 3-year mortality as well as MACE after AMI in the modern PCI and optimal medical therapy era.