Abstract

Patients with good exercise capacity and mildly abnormal exercise echocardiography results have a favorable overall prognosis. We sought to define subgroups that might be at higher risk. We examined outcomes of 868 patients (women, > or = 5 metabolic equivalents; men, > or = 7 metabolic equivalents) with mild rest- or exercise-induced wall-motion abnormalities and evaluated potential predictors of time to cardiac death or nonfatal myocardial infarction (MI). Mean age was 64 +/- 10 years; 477 patients (55%) were men. Mean follow-up was 3.1 +/- 1.5 years; cardiac event rate was 1.2% per person-year. A history of MI was the only significant predictor (risk ratio, 3.9; 95% confidence interval, 1.9-7.8; P = .0001), with 1-, 3-, and 5-year event-free survival of 98.5% +/- 1.1%, 92.6% +/- 2.6%, and 83.3% +/- 5.1%, respectively (event rate, 3.4%). Patients with a history of MI have a higher annual cardiac event rate and may benefit from reevaluation, whereas no history of MI connotes a favorable prognosis.

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