勃起功能障碍患者在农村与城市环境中发生主要不良心血管事件的风险:对 430 621 名男性进行的倾向加权回顾性队列研究。

U. Mann, Dhiraj S Bal, K. Panchendrabose, Ranveer Brar, Premal Patel
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MACE was defined as the first hospitalization for an episode of acute myocardial infarction, heart failure, or stroke that resulted in a hospital visit >24 hours. We classified study groups into ED urban, ED rural, no ED urban, and no ED rural. A multiple logistic regression model was used to determine the propensity score. Stabilized inverse propensity treatment weighting was then applied to the propensity score.\n\n\nOUTCOMES\nA Cox proportional hazard model was used to examine our primary outcome of time to a MACE.\n\n\nRESULTS\nThe median time to a MACE was 2731, 2635, 2441, and 2508 days for ED urban (n = 32 341), ED rural (n = 18 025), no ED rural (n = 146 358), and no ED urban (n = 233 897), respectively. The cohort with ED had a higher proportion of a MACE at 8.94% (n = 4503), as opposed to 4.58% (n = 17 416) for the group without ED. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景勃起功能障碍(ED)与心血管(CV)事件之间的关系已被证实,ED 被认为是 CV 疾病的潜在先兆。居住地是另一个重要的考虑因素,因为农村居住地的影响与较差的健康结果有关。目的研究患有 ED 的农村男性是否与较高的主要不良 CV 事件(MACEs)风险有关。ED 的定义是 1 年内至少开过 2 次 ED 处方。急性心肌梗死、心力衰竭或中风首次住院,且住院时间超过 24 小时,即为 MACE。我们将研究组分为城市急诊室、农村急诊室、无城市急诊室和无农村急诊室。采用多元逻辑回归模型确定倾向得分。结果ED城市组(n = 32 341)、ED农村组(n = 18 025)、无ED农村组(n = 146 358)和无ED城市组(n = 233 897)发生MACE的中位时间分别为2731天、2635天、2441天和2508天。有 ED 的组群发生 MACE 的比例较高,为 8.94%(n = 4503),而无 ED 的组群为 4.58%(n = 17 416)。与无 ED 的城市组相比,在基于反概率治疗加权的稳定时变组合模型中,无 ED 的农村组发生 MACE 的风险更高(危险比为 1.06-1.08)。农村 ED 与无农村 ED 相比,MACE 风险明显更高,且随着时间的推移,效应估计值的强度会增加(危险比为 1.10-1.74)。临床意义研究结果突出表明,治疗 ED 患者的医生需要处理 CV 风险因素,以进行 CV 疾病的一级和二级预防。结论我们的研究证实,ED 是 MACE 的独立风险因素。农村男性发生 MACE 的风险较高,而那些居住在农村并被诊断出患有 ED 的男性发生 MACE 的风险更高。
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Risk of major adverse cardiovascular events in rural vs urban settings among patients with erectile dysfunction: a propensity-weighted retrospective cohort study of 430 621 men.
BACKGROUND The relationship between erectile dysfunction (ED) and cardiovascular (CV) events has been postulated, with ED being characterized as a potential harbinger of CV disease. Location of residence is another important consideration, as the impact of rural residence has been associated with worse health outcomes. AIM To investigate whether men from rural settings with ED are associated with a higher risk of major adverse CV events (MACEs). METHODS A propensity-weighted retrospective cohort study was conducted with provincial health administrative databases. ED was defined as having at least 2 ED prescriptions filled within 1 year. MACE was defined as the first hospitalization for an episode of acute myocardial infarction, heart failure, or stroke that resulted in a hospital visit >24 hours. We classified study groups into ED urban, ED rural, no ED urban, and no ED rural. A multiple logistic regression model was used to determine the propensity score. Stabilized inverse propensity treatment weighting was then applied to the propensity score. OUTCOMES A Cox proportional hazard model was used to examine our primary outcome of time to a MACE. RESULTS The median time to a MACE was 2731, 2635, 2441, and 2508 days for ED urban (n = 32 341), ED rural (n = 18 025), no ED rural (n = 146 358), and no ED urban (n = 233 897), respectively. The cohort with ED had a higher proportion of a MACE at 8.94% (n = 4503), as opposed to 4.58% (n = 17 416) for the group without ED. As compared with no ED urban, no ED rural was associated with higher risks of a MACE in stabilized time-varying comodels based on inverse probability treatment weighting (hazard ratio, 1.06-1.08). ED rural was associated with significantly higher risks of a MACE vs no ED rural, with the strength of the effect estimates increasing over time (hazard ratio, 1.10-1.74). CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS Findings highlight the need for physicians treating patients with ED to address CV risk factors for primary and secondary prevention of CV diseases. STRENGTHS AND LIMITATIONS This is the most extensive retrospective study demonstrating that ED is an independent risk factor for MACE. Due to limitations in data, we were unable to assess certain comorbidities, including obesity and smoking. CONCLUSIONS Our study confirms that ED is an independent risk factor for MACE. Rural men had a higher risk of MACE, with an even higher risk among those who reside rurally and are diagnosed with ED.
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