The Philippine Star

Coronary artery calcium linked to cancer, kidney disease, pneumonia

- By CHARLES C. CHANTE, MD

Patients whose coronary artery calcium scores exceeded 400 were significan­tly more likely to develop cancer, chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease, chronic kidney disease, and hip fractures, compared with adults with undetectab­le CAC, in an analysis of the Multi- Ethnic Study of Atheroscle­rosis.

The study is the first to examine the relationsh­ip between CAC and significan­t noncardiov­ascular disease ( CVD), said the Johns Hopkins Ciccarone Center for the Prevention of Heart Disease, Baltimore. Patients with CAC scores of 0 represent a unique group of “healthy agers,” 20 percent of initial non- CVD events occurred in the 10 percent of patients with CAC scores of more than 400, and 70 percent of events occurred in patients with scores greater than 0.

While CAC is an establishe­d indicator of vascular aging, CVD risk, and all- cause mortality, its relationsh­ip with non- CVD is unclear. To elucidate the issue, the researcher­s analyzed data from the prospectiv­e, observatio­nal Multi- Ethnic Study of Atheroscle­rosis, which included 6,814 adults aged 45- 84 years from six US cities. Patients had no CVD and were not receiving cancer treatment.

Over a median follow- up period of 10.2 years, and after demographi­c factors and predictors of CVD were controlled for, patients with CAC scores exceeding 400 were significan­tly more likely to develop cancer, chronic kidney disease, pneumonia, chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease and hip fracture, compared with patients without detectable CAC. Patients with CAC scores of 0 were at significan­tly lower risk of these diagnoses, compared with patients with scores greater than 0.

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