Litcius/Paper detail

Inflammation-based different association between anatomical severity of coronary artery disease and lung cancer.

Yawei Zhao, Kaixin Yan, Mingzhuang Sun, Yihao Wang, Yundai Chen, Shun-Ying Hu

2022PubMed12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Coronary artery disease (CAD) is associated with cancer. The role of inflammation in the association of CAD with cancer remains unclear. The study investigated whether inflammation could impact the relationship between CAD and lung cancer. METHODS: The study involved 96 newly diagnosed lung cancer patients without receiving anti-cancer therapy and 288 matched non-cancer patients. All the patients underwent coronary angiography and were free from previous percutaneous coronary intervention or coronary artery bypass grafting. SYNTAX score (SXscore) were used to assess severity of CAD. High SXscore (SXhigh) grade was defined as SXscore > 16 (highest quartile). Neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) served as an inflammatory biomarker. NLR-high grade referred to NLR > 2.221 (median). RESULTS: = 0.823). CONCLUSIONS: Inflammation could lead different association between anatomical severity of CAD and lung cancer. Severity of CAD was significantly associated with increased risk of lung cancer among patients with high inflammation rather than among patients with low inflammation.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineInternal medicineLung cancerCoronary artery diseaseInterquartile rangeNeutrophil to lymphocyte ratioOdds ratioCancerPercutaneous coronary interventionGastroenterologyCardiologyOncologyMyocardial infarctionLymphocyteInflammatory Biomarkers in Disease PrognosisChemotherapy-induced cardiotoxicity and mitigationCancer, Lipids, and Metabolism