Abstract
BackgroundThe association between different ABO blood groups and mortality of aortic dissection (AD) remains controversial. This study aimed to examine whether different ABO blood groups affect the prognosis of AD.MethodsDemographic and clinical data were collected from 877 patients diagnosed with AD from 2015 to 2019 in the First Affiliated Hospital of Shantou University Medical College. The association between in-hospital mortality of AD patients and ABO blood group was analyzed using Cox proportional hazards regression models.ResultsThis retrograde cohort study demonstrated that for 877 patients, male gender, non-O blood group, Stanford type B AD (TBAD), higher presenting systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and being a recipient of aortic arch replacement surgery (surgery) or endovascular stent-graft implantation (stent-graft) were associated with decreased in-hospital mortality of AD. In Cox proportional hazards models, non-O blood group was associated with lower risk of early mortality regardless of adjustment (HR = 0.668, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.473–0.944 before adjustment, HR = 0.662, 95% CI 0.468–0.935 after adjustment for age and sex, and HR = 0.641, 95% CI 0.453–0.906 after adjustment for AD types, SBP and surgery). Further analyses revealed that for patients diagnosed with type A AD (TAAD), non-O blood group renders a significant 34.3% decrease in the risk of in-hospital mortality compared with blood group O. Specifically, this difference in mortality risk was found among TAAD patients who did not undergo surgery (HR = 0.579, 95% CI 0.377–0.889), rather than those who did. There was no significant difference in early mortality for patients with TBAD, whether or not stent-grafts were implanted.ConclusionsNon-O blood type decreases the risk of in-hospital mortality, especially for TAAD, in AD patients without surgical intervention. More attention must be paid to blood type O TAAD patients without surgical interventions, and early surgical intervention may be an effective means to decrease in-hospital mortality of TAAD.
Highlights
The association between different ABO blood groups and mortality of aortic dissection (AD) remains controversial
We investigate the association of ABO blood group and the in-hospital mortality of AD
After being selected by the combination of univariate Cox proportional hazards models and a multivariate stepwise logistic regression model, non-O blood group, type B AD (TBAD), higher systolic blood pressure (SBP) and surgical intervention remained associated with decreased in-hospital all-cause mortality (Additional file 1: Tables S3, S4)
Summary
The association between different ABO blood groups and mortality of aortic dissection (AD) remains controversial. This study aimed to examine whether different ABO blood groups affect the prognosis of AD. It has been frequently proposed that individual ABO blood groups affect serum cholesterol concentration, inflammation. Previous studies have associated ABO blood group with other cardiovascular diseases such as atherosclerosis and coronary heart disease [11], the former being a risk factor for and contributor to the pathogenesis of AD [12]. The relationship between ABO blood group and AD prognosis has attracted little focus. We investigate the association of ABO blood group and the in-hospital mortality of AD
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