A cross-sectional analysis of cardiovascular disease in the hemophilia population.

Pubmed ID: 29895623

Pubmed Central ID: PMC5998925

Journal: Blood advances

Publication Date: June 12, 2018

Affiliation: Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.

Link: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5998925/pdf/advances018226.pdf?link_time=2024-07-06_11:20:14.695074

MeSH Terms: Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Middle Aged, Stroke, Cross-Sectional Studies, Myocardial Infarction, Electrocardiography, Hemophilia A, Hemophilia B

Authors: Wheeler A, Eyster ME, Watson C, Sood SL, Cheng D, Ragni M, Kessler CM, Quon D, Shapiro AD, Key NS, Manco-Johnson MJ, Cuker A, Kempton C, Wang TF, Kuriakose P, von Drygalski A, Gill JC, Kouides P, Escobar MA, Leissinger C, Galdzicka S, Corson M, Konkle BA

Cite As: Sood SL, Cheng D, Ragni M, Kessler CM, Quon D, Shapiro AD, Key NS, Manco-Johnson MJ, Cuker A, Kempton C, Wang TF, Eyster ME, Kuriakose P, von Drygalski A, Gill JC, Wheeler A, Kouides P, Escobar MA, Leissinger C, Galdzicka S, Corson M, Watson C, Konkle BA. A cross-sectional analysis of cardiovascular disease in the hemophilia population. Blood Adv 2018 Jun 12;2(11):1325-1333.

Studies:

Abstract

Men with hemophilia were initially thought to be protected from cardiovascular disease (CVD), but it is now clear that atherothrombotic events occur. The primary objective of the CVD in Hemophilia study was to determine the prevalence of CVD and CVD risk factors in US older men with moderate and severe hemophilia and to compare findings with those reported in age-comparable men in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) cohort. We hypothesized if lower factor levels are protective from CVD, we would see a difference in CVD rates between more severely affected and unaffected men. Beginning in October 2012, 200 patients with moderate or severe hemophilia A or B (factor VIII or IX level ≤ 5%), aged 54 to 73 years, were enrolled at 19 US hemophilia treatment centers. Data were collected from patient interview and medical records. A fasting blood sample and electrocardiogram (ECG) were obtained and assayed and read centrally. CVD was defined as any angina, any myocardial infarction by ECG or physician diagnosis, any self-reported nonhemorrhagic stroke or transient ischemic attack verified by physicians, or any history of coronary bypass graft surgery or coronary artery angioplasty. CVD risk factors were common in the population. Compared with men of similar age in the ARIC cohort, patients with hemophilia had significantly less CVD (15% vs 25.8%; <i>P</i> &lt; .001). However, on an individual patient level, CVD events occur and efforts to prevent cardiovascular events are warranted. Few men were receiving secondary prophylaxis with low-dose aspirin, despite published opinion that it can be used safely in this patient population.