Cardiorespiratory Fitness and Incidence of Major Adverse Cardiovascular Events in US Veterans: A Cohort Study Article

Full Text via DOI: 10.1016/j.mayocp.2016.09.013 PMID: 27876315 Web of Science: 000393912300011

Cited authors

  • Kokkinos, Peter F.; Faselis, Charles; Myers, Jonathan; Narayan, Puneet; Sui, Xuemei; Zhang, Jiajia; Lavie, Carl J.; Moore, Hans; Karasik, Pamela; Fletcher, Ross

Abstract

  • Objective: To assess the association between exercise capacity and the risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACEs).; Patients and Methods: A symptom-limited exercise tolerance test was performed to assess exercise capacity in 20,590 US veterans (12,975 blacks and 7615 whites; mean +/- SD age, 58.2 +/- 11.0 years) from the Veterans Affairs medical centers in Washington, District of Columbia, and Palo Alto, California. None had a history of MACE or evidence of ischemia at the time of or before their exercise tolerance test. We established quintiles of cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) categories based on age-specific peak metabolic equivalents (METs) achieved. We also defined the age-specific MET level associated with no risk for MACE (hazard ratio [HR], 1.0) and formed 4 additional CRF categories based on METs achieved below (least fit and low fit) and above (moderately fit and highly fit) that level. Multivariate Cox models were used to estimate HR and 95% CIs for mortality across fitness categories.; Results: During follow-up (median, 11.3 years; range, 0.3-33.0 years), 2846 individuals experienced MACEs. The CRF-MACE association was inverse and graded. The risk for MACE declined precipitously for those with a CRF level of 6.0 METs or higher. When considering CFR categories based on the agespecific MET threshold, the risk increased for those in the 2 CFR categories below that threshold (HR, 1.95; 95% CI, 1.73-2.21 and HR, 1.41; 95% CI, 1.27-1.56 for the least-fit and low-fit individuals, respectively) and decreased for those above it (HR, 0.77; 95% CI, 0.68-0.87 and HR, 0.57; 95% CI, 0.48-0.67 for moderately fit and highly fit, respectively).; Conclusion: Increased CRF is inversely and independently associated with the risk for MACE. When an age-specific MET threshold was defined, the risk for MACE increased significantly for those below that threshold and decreased for those above it (P<. 001). (C) 2016 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research

Publication date

  • 2017

Published in

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 0025-6196

Start page

  • 39

End page

  • 48

Volume

  • 92

Issue

  • 1