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Prognostic Impact of Chronic Vasodilator Therapy in Patients With Vasospastic Anginaopen access

Authors
Lim, YongwhanKim, Min ChulAhn, YoungkeunCho, Kyung HoonSim, Doo SunHong, Young JoonKim, Ju HanJeong, Myung HoBaek, Sang HongHer, Sung-HoLee, Kwan YongHan, Seung HwanRha, Seung-WoonChoi, Dong-JuGwon, Hyeon-CheolKwon, Hyuck MoonYang, Tae-HyunPark, Keun-HoJo, Sang-Ho
Issue Date
5-Apr-2022
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
nitrates; outcomes; variant angina pectoris; vasodilator agents
Citation
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION, v.11, no.7
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION
Volume
11
Number
7
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/140811
DOI
10.1161/JAHA.121.023776
ISSN
2047-9980
Abstract
Background Chronic vasodilator therapy with long-acting nitrate is frequently used to treat vasospastic angina. However, the clinical benefits of this approach are controversial. We investigated the prognostic impact of vasodilator therapy in patients with vasospastic angina from the multicenter, prospective VA-KOREA (Vasospastic Angina in KOREA) registry. Methods and Results We analyzed data from 1895 patients with positive intracoronary ergonovine provocation test results. The patients were divided into 4 groups: no vasodilator (n=359), nonnitrate vasodilator (n=1187), conventional nitrate (n=209), and a combination of conventional nitrate and other vasodilators (n=140). The primary end point was a composite of cardiac death, acute coronary syndrome, and new-onset arrhythmia at 2 years. Secondary end points were the individual components of the primary end point, all-cause death, and rehospitalization due to recurrent angina. The groups did not differ in terms of the risk of the primary end point. However, the acute coronary syndrome risk was significantly higher in the conventional nitrate (hazard ratio [HR], 2.49; 95% CI, 1.01-6.14; P=0.047) and combination groups (HR, 3.34; 95% CI, 1.15-9.75, P=0.027) compared with the no-vasodilator group, as assessed using the inverse probability of treatment weights. Subgroup analyses revealed prominent adverse effects of nitrate in patients with an intermediate positive ergonovine provocation test result and in those with low Japanese Coronary Spasm Association scores. Conclusions Long-acting nitrate-based chronic vasodilator therapy was associated with an increased 2-year risk of acute coronary syndrome in patients with vasospastic angina, especially in low-risk patients.
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