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. 2000 Mar;93(3):227-37.

[One-year follow-up of a population of patients with angina. Factors influencing mortality and occurrence of cardiovascular events. Results of the ELAN study]

[Article in French]
Affiliations
  • PMID: 11004968

[One-year follow-up of a population of patients with angina. Factors influencing mortality and occurrence of cardiovascular events. Results of the ELAN study]

[Article in French]
L Guize et al. Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss. 2000 Mar.

Abstract

The ELAN (Etude longitudinale dans l'angor) study was carried out both to acquire better knowledge of the occurrence of major cardiovascular events (myocardial infarction, revascularization surgery, death) in patients followed up for angina pectoris, and to determine the factors influencing such events. A cohort of angina patients was formed in January 1997, and 3,284 patients were followed up by 488 French cardiologists during a one-year period. Of these 3,284 patients, 96 (29/1000) died; causes of death included underlying coronary heart disease in 31, sudden death in 8, other cardiac aetiologies in 35, and noncardiac causes in 22. Sixty-nine (21/1000) patients developed myocardial infarction, 240 (73/1000) underwent PTCA, and 119 (36/1000) underwent coronary bypass surgery. Factors associated with an increased risk of death were age, diabetes mellitus, heart failure and angina type, mixed and rest angina being associated with poorer prognosis compared to exertional angina. Infarction risk increased with age and a history of previous infarction. Analysis of therapeutic factors after adjustment for the above risk factors showed a beneficial effect of betablockers on both cardiovascular and all-cause mortality and of aspirin on all-cause mortality.

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