Coronary plaque characterization in psoriasis reveals high-risk features that improve after treatment in a prospective observational study

JB Lerman, AA Joshi, A Chaturvedi, TM Aberra… - Circulation, 2017 - Am Heart Assoc
JB Lerman, AA Joshi, A Chaturvedi, TM Aberra, AK Dey, JA Rodante, T Salahuddin
Circulation, 2017Am Heart Assoc
Background: Psoriasis, a chronic inflammatory disease associated with an accelerated risk
of myocardial infarction, provides an ideal human model to study inflammatory
atherogenesis in vivo. We hypothesized that the increased cardiovascular risk observed in
psoriasis would be partially attributable to an elevated subclinical coronary artery disease
burden composed of noncalcified plaques with high-risk features. However, inadequate
efforts have been made to directly measure coronary artery disease in this vulnerable …
Background
Psoriasis, a chronic inflammatory disease associated with an accelerated risk of myocardial infarction, provides an ideal human model to study inflammatory atherogenesis in vivo. We hypothesized that the increased cardiovascular risk observed in psoriasis would be partially attributable to an elevated subclinical coronary artery disease burden composed of noncalcified plaques with high-risk features. However, inadequate efforts have been made to directly measure coronary artery disease in this vulnerable population. As such, we sought to compare total coronary plaque burden and noncalcified coronary plaque burden (NCB) and high-risk plaque (HRP) prevalence between patients with psoriasis (n=105), patients with hyperlipidemia eligible for statin therapy under National Cholesterol Education Program-Adult Treatment Panel III guidelines (n=100) who were ≈10 years older, and healthy volunteers without psoriasis (n=25).
Methods
Patients underwent coronary computed-tomography angiography for total coronary plaque burden and NCB quantification and HRP identification, defined as low attenuation (<30 hounsfield units), positive remodeling (>1.10), and spotty calcification. A consecutive sample of the first 50 patients with psoriasis was scanned again 1 year after therapy.
Results
Despite being younger and at lower traditional risk than patients with hyperlipidemia, patients with psoriasis had increased NCB (mean±SD: 1.18±0.33 versus 1.11±0.32, P=0.02) and similar HRP prevalence (P=0.58). Furthermore, compared to healthy volunteers, patients with psoriasis had increased total coronary plaque burden (1.22±0.31 versus 1.04±0.22, P=0.001), NCB (1.18±0.33 versus 1.03±0.21, P=0.004), and HRP prevalence beyond traditional risk (odds ratio, 6.0; 95% confidence interval, 1.1–31.7; P=0.03). Last, among patients with psoriasis followed for 1 year, improvement in psoriasis severity was associated with improvement in total coronary plaque burden (β=0.45, 0.23–0.67; P<0.001) and NCB (β=0.53, 0.32–0.74; P<0.001) beyond traditional risk factors.
Conclusions
Patients with psoriasis had greater NCB and increased HRP prevalence than healthy volunteers. In addition, patients with psoriasis had elevated NCB and equivalent HRP prevalence as older patients with hyperlipidemia. Last, modulation of target organ inflammation (eg, skin) was associated with an improvement in NCB at 1 year, suggesting that control of remote sites of inflammation may translate into reduced coronary artery disease risk.
Am Heart Assoc