Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors and Outcomes of Acute Myocardial Infarction in Young Adults: Evidence From 2 Nationwide Cohorts in the United States a Decade Apart Article

Full Text via DOI: 10.1016/j.cpcardiol.2023.101747 Web of Science: 000999286100001

Cited authors

  • Desai R, Mishra V, Chhina AK, Jain A, Vyas A, Allamneni R, Lavie CJ, Sachdeva R, Kumar G

Abstract

  • The purpose of this study was to evaluate 2 national in-patient cohorts of young adults (18-44 years) hospitalized with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) a decade apart to highlight its prevalence, asso-ciated comorbidities, and in-hospital outcomes. We identified hospitalizations for AMI in young adults in 2007 and 2017 using the weighted data from the National Inpatient Sample. We compared admission rates, sociodemographic characteristics, in-hospital morbidity, complications, mortality, rate of coronary interventions, and healthcare utilization between the 2 cohorts. We found that the admission rate of AMI increased among young adults in 2017 vs 2007. The overall admission rate was higher in males, although with a decline (77.1% vs 66.1%), whereas it rose from 28.9% to 33.9% in females. Hypertension (47.8% vs 60.7%), smoking (49.7% vs 55.8%), obesity (14.8% vs 26.8%), and diabetes mellitus (22.0% vs 25.6%) increased in the 2017 cohort. Post-AMI complications: cardiogenic shock (aOR = 1.16 [1.06-1.27]) and fatal arrhythmias heightened with comparable all-cause mortality (aOR = 1.01 [0.93-1.10], P = 0.749). Reperfu-sion interventions, percutaneous coronary interven-tion (PCI) and coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) decreased in the 2017 cohort (PCI; aOR = 0.95 [0.91-0.98], CABG; aOR = 0.66 [0.61-0.71], P < 0.001). Our study highlights the rise in AMI hospi-talizations, plateauing of mortality, sex-based and racial disparities, the surge in post-MI complications, and a reassuring decline in the requirement of reper-fusion interventions in young AMI patients over the decade. (Curr Probl Cardiol 2023;48:101747.)

Publication date

  • 2023

Published in

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 0146-2806

Number of pages

  • 14

Volume

  • 48

Issue

  • 9