Litcius/Paper detail

Prognostic impact of residual inflammatory and triglyceride risk in statin-treated patients with well-controlled LDL cholesterol and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease

Francesca Maria Di Muro, Birgit Vogel, Samantha Sartori, Benjamin Bay, Angelo Oliva, Yihan Feng, Prakash Krishnan, Joseph Sweeny, Mauro Gitto, Kenneth F. Smith, Pedro Moreno, Johny Nicolas, Parasuram Krishnamoorthy, Pier Pasquale Leone, Deepak L Bhatt, George Dangas, Annapoorna Kini, Samin K. Sharma, Roxana Mehran

2025European Journal of Preventive Cardiology15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIMS: Identifying alternative contributors to the residual risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) beyond LDL cholesterol (LDL-C) levels is crucial. We investigated the relative impact of triglycerides (TGs) and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) on outcomes in statin-treated patients with well-controlled LDL-C undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for established ASCVD. METHODS AND RESULTS: We included 9446 statin-treated patients with LDL-C < 70 mg/dL undergoing PCI between 2012 and 2022, stratified into four groups: (i) no residual risk (TG <150 mg/dL + hs-CRP <2 mg/L); (ii) residual TG risk (TG ≥150 mg/dL + hs-CRP <2 mg/L); (iii) residual inflammatory risk (TG <150 mg/dL + hs-CRP ≥2 mg/L); and (iv) residual TG and inflammatory risk (TG ≥150 mg/dL + hs-CRP ≥2 mg/L). The primary endpoint was major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) at 1 year, consisting of all-cause mortality, myocardial infarction, or stroke. Cox regression analysis was performed, using the no residual risk group as a reference. Of the total population, 5339 (56.5%) had no residual risk, 555 (5.9%) presented residual TG risk, 3009 (31.9%) had residual inflammatory risk, and 543 (5.7%) exhibited residual combined risk. After multivariable adjustment, patients with residual inflammatory or combined risk showed a significantly higher hazard of MACE, mainly driven by all-cause mortality. No significant difference was observed between patients with residual TG risk and those with no residual risk. CONCLUSION: In statin-treated patients with well-controlled LDL-C undergoing PCI, residual inflammatory risk-alone or in combination with residual TG risk-was associated with a higher incidence of MACE, highlighting the need for targeted preventive strategies beyond LDL-C lowering.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineResidual riskInternal medicineMaceStatinMyocardial infarctionHazard ratioRosuvastatinCholesterolTriglycerideConventional PCICardiologyGastroenterologyConfidence intervalLipoproteins and Cardiovascular HealthAdipokines, Inflammation, and Metabolic DiseasesDiabetes, Cardiovascular Risks, and Lipoproteins