Abstract

Although disturbances of the fibrinolytic system and serum lipid, and the presence of inflammation, may be risk factors for coronary artery disease (CAD), few reports have investigated these relationships in Japanese patients. Data on 106 patients (79 men and 27 women, mean age 62.3 years) with atherosclerotic lesions on the coronary angiogram were evaluated prospectively to identify whether the factors were useful in predicting the risk of coronary events during a follow-up of 50+/-4 months. Of the 106 patients who were followed, 11 patients had coronary events (4 acute myocardial infarction and 7 unstable angina pectoris). In univariate Cox analyses, a high level of tissue-plasminogen activator (t-PA), apolipoprotein CII, C-reactive protein (CRP), and a low level of high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (HDL-C) was each associated with a significant increase in the risk of future cardiac events. The stepwise model of Cox proportional hazards analysis selected only a high level of t-PA and CRP as predictors of cardiac events. Controlling for any risk factor did not lower the relation between t-PA and the risk of cardiac events, whereas the relative risk of cardiac events in CRP was not significant when controlled for HDL-C. Thus, in prospective data obtained from a cohort of Japanese patients with coronary atherosclerotic lesions, the elevation of t-PA was an independent predictor of subsequent cardiac events. The prognostic role of CRP in cardiac events was related to a low level of HDL-C.

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