Article Text

Original article
Coronary artery calcification is increased in patients with COPD and associated with increased morbidity and mortality
  1. Michelle C Williams1,
  2. John T Murchison2,
  3. Lisa D Edwards3,
  4. Alvar Agustí4,
  5. Per Bakke5,
  6. Peter M A Calverley6,
  7. Bartolome Celli7,
  8. Harvey O Coxson8,
  9. Courtney Crim3,
  10. David A Lomas9,
  11. Bruce E Miller10,
  12. Steve Rennard11,
  13. Edwin K Silverman7,
  14. Ruth Tal-Singer10,
  15. Jørgen Vestbo12,
  16. Emiel Wouters13,
  17. Julie C Yates10,
  18. Edwin J R van Beek14,
  19. David E Newby1,
  20. William MacNee15,
  21. for the Evaluation of COPD Longitudinally to Identify Predictive Surrogate Endpoints (ECLIPSE) investigators
  1. 1University of Edinburgh/British Heart Foundation Centre for Cardiovascular Science, Edinburgh, UK
  2. 2Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
  3. 3GlaxoSmithKline, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, USA
  4. 4Thorax Institute, Hospital Clinic, Universitat de Barcelona; CIBER Enfermedades Respiratorias (CIBERES), FISIB, Mallorca, Spain
  5. 5University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway
  6. 6Department of Respiratory Medicine, University Hospital Aintree, Liverpool, UK
  7. 7Department of Respiratory Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
  8. 8University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
  9. 9Department of Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
  10. 10GlaxoSmithKline, King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, USA
  11. 11University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska, USA
  12. 12Department of Respiratory Medicine, Odense University & University of Southern Denmark, Denmark/University of Manchester, Academic Health Science Centre, Manchester, UK
  13. 13Department of Respiratory Medicine, Maastricht University Medical Centre, Maastricht, The Netherlands
  14. 14Clinical Research Imaging Centre, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
  15. 15Centre for Inflammation Research, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
  1. Correspondence to Dr Michelle C Williams, University/BHF Centre for Cardiovascular Science, Chancellor's Building, SU305, 49 Little France Crescent, Edinburgh EH16SUF, UK; michelle.williams{at}ed.ac.uk

Abstract

Background Coronary artery calcification is pathognomonic of coronary artery disease (CAD). Whether CAD in patients with COPD is linked to lung function, functional capacity and/or clinically relevant outcomes is unknown. The objective was to assess the association between CAD and disease severity, functional capacity and outcomes in patients with COPD.

Methods Coronary artery calcium score (CACS; Agatston score) was measured using chest CT in patients with COPD, smokers with normal spirometry and non-smokers from the Evaluation of COPD Longitudinally to Identify Predictive Surrogate Endpoints (ECLIPSE) study.

Results CACS was measured in 942 subjects: 672 with COPD (mean age±SD, 63±7 years; FEV1 49±16% predicted), 199 smokers with normal spirometry (54±9 years; FEV1 110±12% predicted) and 71 non-smokers (55±9 years; FEV1 114±14% predicted). CACS was higher in patients with COPD than smokers or non-smokers (median (IQR), 128 (492) vs 0 (75) vs 0 (3) Agatston units (AU), p<0.001). In patients with COPD, CACS correlated with age, pack-years, 6 min walking distance, modified Medical Research Council Dyspnoea score and circulating levels of interleukin (IL)-6, IL-8, Clara Cell protein 16, surfactant protein D and peripheral blood neutrophil count, but not with emphysema, exacerbation frequency, % predicted FEV1 or decline in FEV1. CACS was higher in patients with COPD who died than in those who survived until 3-year follow-up (CACS 406 vs 103 AU, p<0.001), and was associated with mortality in a Cox proportional hazards model (p=0.036).

Conclusions Patients with COPD have more CAD than controls and this is associated with increased dyspnoea, reduced exercise capacity and increased mortality. These data indicate that the presence of CAD in patients with COPD is associated with poor clinical outcomes.

  • COPD ÀÜ Mechanisms
  • Emphysema
  • Imaging/CT MRI etc

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Key messages

What is the key question?

  • What is the relationship between coronary artery calcification and clinical outcomes in patients with COPD?

What is the bottom line?

  • The extent of coronary artery calcification was substantially greater in patients with COPD than in smokers with normal spirometry or non-smokers, and was correlated with dyspnoea, exercise capacity and all-cause mortality, but not with FEV or exacerbations of COPD, indicating a link between coronary artery calcification and poor clinical outcome in COPD.

Why read on?

  • The identification of patients with a high coronary artery calcium score is important to provide appropriate targeted therapy to modify cardiovascular risk by treating cardiovascular disease appropriately.

Introduction

The relationship between COPD and coronary artery disease (CAD) is complex and remains poorly understood. Both diseases have a high worldwide prevalence and frequently coexist.1 COPD is an independent risk factor for CAD and the presence of COPD is associated with an increased risk of CAD and cardiovascular mortality.1 ,2 In the Evaluation of COPD Longitudinally to Identify Predictive Surrogate Endpoints (ECLIPSE) study (SCO104960; NCT00292552), patients with COPD had an increased prevalence of self-reported CAD compared with smoker and non-smoker control subjects.3 However, this increased prevalence is not solely attributable to shared risk factors, with COPD remaining an independent predictor for the development of CAD after adjustment for smoking and other cardiovascular risk factors.4

Coronary artery calcification can be identified by CT and is pathognomonic of coronary atherosclerosis. Coronary artery ‘calcium scoring’ methods, such as the Agatston score, quantify this calcification based on its extent and density on CT images. Coronary artery calcium score (CACS) is widely used to identify and stratify risk for CAD.5 CACS correlates with increased mortality in smokers6 and may provide additive prognostic information to that obtained from traditional methods of cardiovascular risk stratification such as the Framingham risk score.7

The pathogenic mechanisms linking COPD and CAD remain unknown, but are likely to involve a multifactorial process of systemic inflammation, oxidative stress, increased thrombogenicity, vascular dysfunction and hypoxia.4 ,8–10 Although low-grade systemic inflammation occurs in a variety of conditions, including COPD and CAD,11–13 the weak associations identified between inflammatory markers and CACS14 or atherosclerotic plaque burden15 suggest that the mechanisms of association may be distinct.

In patients with COPD, the relationship between CACS and clinically relevant long-term outcomes such as mortality, exacerbation rate or FEV1 decline have not previously been evaluated. The aims of this study were to assess these associations in the ECLIPSE study cohort.

Methods

Study population and ethics

We assessed coronary artery calcium on non-gated chest CT images in a subset of subjects recruited to the ECLIPSE study.16 ECLIPSE is an international multicentre observational longitudinal cohort study of subjects with COPD, smokers with normal spirometry and non-smokers. Ethics committees of all participating institutions approved the study and written informed consent was obtained from all subjects.

Participants were aged 40–75 years and presence of significant lung disease was determined by history, physical examination and screening investigations. Patients with COPD were current or ex-smokers (≥10 pack years), with baseline post-bronchodilator FEV1<80% of the reference value and FEV1/FVC<0.7. Smokers with normal spirometry were free of significant lung disease, were current or ex-smokers (≥10 pack years), and had baseline post-bronchodilator FEV1>85% and FEV1/FVC>0.7. Non-smokers were free from significant lung disease, had smoking history of <1 pack year, and had baseline post-bronchodilator FEV1>85% and FEV1/FVC>0.7. Key exclusion criteria were the presence of respiratory disorders other than COPD and a reported COPD exacerbation within 4 weeks of enrolment. Comorbidities were not excluded, but these had to be clinically stable at the time of assessment.

Clinical, physiological and biochemical measurements

Participants underwent detailed phenotypic characterisation and follow-up over 3 years, including lung physiology, imaging, biomarkers, health outcomes and mortality, as reported previously3 (see online supplement).

Computed tomography

All subjects underwent a low-dose CT of the chest using multi-detector scanners with a minimum of four rows (GE Healthcare or Siemens Healthcare). Imaging was performed in the supine position, at suspended full inspiration, without administration of intravenous contrast. Exposure settings were 120 kVp and 40 mAs and images were reconstructed using 1.0 mm (Siemens) or 1.25 mm (GE) contiguous slices and a low spatial frequency reconstruction algorithm (GE: Standard; Siemens: b35f). Quantitative assessment of the percentage of low attenuation areas (%LAA), representing the presence of emphysema, was performed using a threshold of −950 Hounsfield units.

Coronary artery calcium score

CACS was assessed on the standard images used for analysis of the lungs and no additional reconstructions were performed. CT scans were assessed by a trained observer (MCW), who was blinded to subject characteristics. One hundred randomly selected scans were reassessed (by MCW and JM) to assess intra-observer and inter-observer variability. Images were analysed on a dedicated workstation using dedicated analysis software (VScore, Vitrea Fx, V.3.1.0, Vital Images, Minnetonka, Minnesota, USA).

Image quality was assessed on a five-point Likert scale (1, excellent; 2, mild artefact; 3, moderate artefact; 4, severe artefact; 5, non-diagnostic) for each of the three main coronary arteries. Image quality scores from individual vessels were summed to calculate the total image quality score. Images with a total image quality score of 15 were excluded from further analysis.

CACS was assessed using the Agatston scoring method.17 Coronary calcification was defined as an area in the course of a coronary artery that had an attenuation threshold of ≥130 Hounsfield units and was ≥1 mm2. On each axial slice the area of calcification that met these requirements was measured and then multiplied by a weighting factor dependent on the peak attenuation within the region. These weighted areas were summed to produce the total Agatston CACS. For the interpretation of Agatston score in asymptomatic patients the absolute value can be used or it can be considered as low (<100 Agatston units (AU)), intermediate (101–400 AU), high (401–1000 AU) or very high (>1000 AU).

Normal ranges for Agatston scores in healthy asymptomatic individuals stratified by age, gender and ethnicity have been published.18 These can be used to calculate the CACS percentile (CACSP) for individual patients. A CACSP above 90% can be used as an indication to commence primary preventative therapy.

Statistical analysis

Results are shown as mean (SD), median (IQR), frequency distribution or proportions. Comparisons between subject groups were carried out using analysis of variance, Kruskal–Wallis tests, van Elteren tests or Cochran–Mantel–Haenszel tests, adjusting for age, gender and smoking pack-years. Pack-year-adjusted CACSP medians and IQRs were calculated from quantile regression models based on 1000 bootstrap samples. Linear associations were assessed by Spearman correlation coefficients due to non-normality of the CACS and CACSP; 95% CIs were calculated by the Fisher z-transformation method. To adjust for effects of covariates on CACS, multiple regression was conducted on the log-transformed values; estimates were back-transformed for presentation. The CACSP did not respond to log transformation, so the analysis was two-stage; a logistic regression model to describe the effect of covariates on a zero versus non-zero percentile and multiple regression on the log-transformed non-zero values. Cox proportional hazard models were constructed to compare mortality between subject groups. For all models, covariates that were expected to impact the dependent variables or showed differences among the cohorts were included, including age, sex and pack-years. Two-sided p<0.05 values were considered significant with no adjustment for multiple testing. Analyses were conducted with SAS V.9.1 (SAS Institute, Cary, North Carolina, USA). Intra-observer and inter-observer agreement were assessed via concordance correlation coefficients.19

Results

Demographic details

Of the 2746 subjects enrolled in ECLIPSE, 2574 patients had scans available for analysis. From a random sample of 1001 scans, CACS was measured in 942 scans after the exclusion of duplicate scans and five scans (0.5%) with poor image quality (image quality score of 15). The demographic details of the study population are show in table 1 and differences between the ECLIPSE cohort and CACS cohort are shown in online supplement table Si. Consistent with the total ECLIPSE cohort, subjects with COPD were older, had a higher pack-year history, a lower post-bronchodilator % predicted FEV1 and a higher %LAA. Patients with COPD also had a higher frequency of diabetes mellitus, hypertension, statin therapy and patient-reported cardiovascular disease than smoker or non-smoker controls (table 2).

Table 1

Demographic and baseline details of the study population

Table 2

Cardiovascular risk factors

Coronary artery calcium score

Intra-observer and inter-observer agreement for CACS were excellent (concordance correlation coefficients 0.992 and 0.956, respectively, p<0.001 for both).

The median CACS was higher in subjects with COPD than control smokers and non-smokers (128 (492) vs 0 (75) vs 0 (3) AU, p<0.001, online supplement table Sii). The CACS was also higher in men than women and in those who reported cardiovascular disease, diabetes mellitus, hypertension or treatment with statin therapy (see online supplement tables Siii–Sv). The absence of coronary artery calcification was more frequent in non-smokers (72%) than for smokers (53%) or patients with COPD (23%). High (>400 AU) or very high (>1000 AU) CACS were more frequent in patients with COPD (see online supplement table Svi).

The CACSP was greater in patients with COPD than in smokers or non-smokers (71% (60%) vs 0 (78%) vs 0 (43%), respectively, p<0.001). When further corrected for pack-years, the CACSP remained greater in patients with COPD than in smokers and non-smokers.

Spearman correlation analysis showed that CACS in patients with COPD was associated with age and pack-years (see online supplement table Svii). CACS also correlated with markers of functional capacity and symptoms, including the 6 min walking distance, modified Medical Research Council Dyspnoea score and BODE index.20 CACS in patients with COPD was weakly correlated with the extent of emphysema and with borderline statistical significance and with FEV1 /FVC ratio. However, there were no significant correlations with FEV1, FEV1% predicted, decline in FEV1 or reported exacerbation frequency. When stratified into the four patient types proposed by the 2011 Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) strategy document (A, B, C and D),21 there were no differences in CACS (p=0.681) or CACSP (p=0.398).

CACS in subjects with COPD correlated with several circulating inflammatory biomarkers (see online supplement table Svii), including interleukin (IL)-6, IL-8, Clara cell secretory protein 16, surfactant protein D and peripheral blood neutrophil count. It did not correlate with high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (CRP), fibrinogen, tumour necrosis factor α, chemokine ligand 18, sRAGE or total white blood cell count. There was a higher CACS and CACSP in patients with persistent systemic inflammation (defined as two or more elevated biomarkers on two occasions)12 compared with patients who had no elevated biomarkers (see online supplement table Sviii). This difference was statistically significant for CACS but not CACSP.

Multivariate analysis of CACS and percentiles

Multiple regression analysis showed that CACS score was associated with age, gender, pack-years, % predicted FEV1 and patient-reported cardiovascular disease. CACSP was associated with age, gender, patient-reported cardiovascular disease and the 6 min walking distance (table 3).

Table 3

Multivariate analysis for calcium score and coronary artery calcium score percentile (CACSP) based on age, gender and ethnicity

CACS and mortality

Patients with COPD who died (n=63) during 3 years of follow-up had a higher CACS, CACSP and CACSP adjusted for pack-years than subjects who survived (see online supplement table Six). As a single predictor of mortality, CACS had a HR of 1.55 (95% CI 1.26 to 1.92) and CACSP greater than 90% had a HR of 1.66 (95% CI 0.98 to 2.81). After adjustment for age, gender and pack-years, CACS had a HR of 1.42 (CI 1.12 to 1.78) and CACSP had a HR of 1.77 (95% CI 1.04 to 3.01). In Cox proportional hazards models the CACS adjusted for age, gender and pack-years was associated with increased mortality in all subjects (p=0.005) and in patients with COPD (p=0.007). The same was found for a CACSP greater than 90% (p=0.051 for all subjects, and p=0.072 for patients with COPD) (figure 1 and online supplement figure Si). The addition of hypertension or statin therapy had little effect on the HRs and neither was significant in the models. CACS and patient-reported cardiovascular disease were predictive of mortality, but the two assessments together did not improve the prediction of mortality.

Figure 1

Cox proportional hazards model for patients with COPD and (A) coronary artery calcium score (CACS) (Agatston score)adjusted for age, gender, pack-years, severity of COPD and self-reported cardiovascular disease and (B) CACSP adjusted for pack-years.

Discussion

In a large cohort of well characterised subjects, we have shown that patients with COPD had a higher CACS corrected for age, gender, ethnicity and pack-year smoking history than smokers with normal spirometry or non-smokers. Moreover, a higher CACS is associated with adverse functional capacity and increased mortality in these patients. We conclude that patients with COPD have a disproportionately greater burden of CAD that causes increased morbidity and mortality.

Low-level chronic inflammation is believed to play an important role in COPD and cardiovascular disease.12 Coronary artery calcium and atherosclerotic plaque burden are associated with increased systemic inflammatory markers such as CRP, IL-6 and fibrinogen in population studies.14 ,15 However, in our study these associations were weak, suggesting that inflammatory markers and coronary artery calcium may reflect different disease mechanisms. Recently a pattern of systemic inflammation with raised levels of CRP, IL-6, white blood cell count and fibrinogen has been associated with COPD.12 Persistent inflammation (defined as elevation in two systemic biomarkers) occurred in a proportion of patients who had significantly worse outcomes.12 In our study the systemic inflammatory phenotype was associated with a small increase in CACS. We therefore believe that it is unlikely that inflammation alone can account for the association between COPD and CAD.

In the multiple regression analysis CACS was associated with the degree of airflow limitation. However, whether lung disease per se has a direct influence on the initiation or progression of CAD remains unclear. Due to overlap in the diagnostic symptoms, it can be difficult to establish whether CAD is present in patients with COPD. Indeed, acute coronary syndromes and stable angina are under-diagnosed in patients with COPD.22–24 The association between CACS and dyspnoea, quality of life and exercise capacity suggests that some symptoms and functional impairment may be attributable to occult CAD rather than COPD. Thus, the identification of coronary artery calcification by CT may aid in the diagnosis and treatment of occult CAD in patients with COPD.

Cardiovascular disease is an important cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with COPD, accounting for up to 50% of deaths.25 Furthermore, patients with more severe COPD have higher cardiovascular morbidity and mortality.1 This association may indicate a shared pathogenesis, a synergistic impact on disease progression or an under diagnosis or under treatment of concomitant CAD in patients with COPD. In addition, there may be common responses to smoking-induced tissue injury, such as inflammation, oxidative stress or tissue remodelling.26 The association between CACS and cardiovascular events or mortality has been established in asymptomatic individuals,27–29 subjects at intermediate30 or high6 likelihood of cardiovascular disease, and patients with hypertension31 or diabetes mellitus.32 An association between CACS and mortality has also been identified in lung cancer screening studies.33 Our results extend these findings to show, for the first time, that CACS is also associated with increased morbidity and mortality in patients with COPD. Clinical intervention trials are now warranted to ascertain whether screening and treatment for occult CAD may improve the clinical outcome of patients with COPD.

Study limitations

Coronary artery calcification is a surrogate marker of coronary atherosclerosis and a higher CACS is associated with increased risk of significant coronary artery stenosis.34 However, in the absence of coronary artery calcification, haemodynamically significant non-calcified plaques may be present in between 0.8% and 0.9% of asymptomatic individuals.35 Thus a zero calcium score in our study is likely to be associated with an underestimation of the prevalence of CAD.

The standard reconstruction parameters for calcium scoring utilises 3 mm non-overlapping slices.36 However, coronary artery calcium can be identified using non-gated chest CT images.33 ,37 Good correlations have been identified between standard reconstructions and CACS calculated using chest CT38 or non-gated images.37 However, the absolute Agatston numbers may not be the same as those calculated using standard reconstructions. Nevertheless, this technique can be used to investigate associations between subgroups within this study.

Cigarette smoking is a major and common risk factor for COPD and CAD. Any association between COPD and CAD could therefore be explained by this shared risk factor. In our study patients with COPD had higher pack-years than smoking controls. We adjusted for linear effects of pack-years in the regression models, but there could be non-linear effects that could contribute to the observed differences.

A further limitation is that cardiovascular events were not recorded and cardiovascular risk scores such as the Framingham risk score could not be calculated. Confounding factors such as hypertension and hyperlipidaemia could also affect the study results, as could other unmeasured cardiovascular risk factors. The ECLIPSE study excluded patients with respiratory disorders other than COPD and thus these results are not necessarily generalisable to other respiratory disorders. Participants with acute exacerbations within 4 weeks of enrolment were also excluded. However, coronary artery calcium develops over a prolonged period of time, thus this is unlikely to affect the results.

Conclusion

This is the first large cohort study to identify the presence of a higher CACS in patients with COPD and to show an association of this with poor clinical outcomes in these patients, including all-cause mortality.

Acknowledgments

We thank the CT analysis staff (T Candido, S Cogswell, H Davis, N Farzaneh, L Holy, N Krowchuk, H Lee, E Phillips, C Storness-Bliss, N Tai, A-T Tran, N Tran, E Wang, and T Yokogawa) for technical assistance with the CT analysis and data management.

References

Supplementary materials

  • Supplementary Data

    This web only file has been produced by the BMJ Publishing Group from an electronic file supplied by the author(s) and has not been edited for content.

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Footnotes

  • Collaborators See online supplementary appendix for the principal investigators and centres participating in ECLIPSE.

  • Contributors The study was conceived and conducted by WM, AA, PB, PMAC, BC, HOC, CC, DAL, BEM, SR, EKS, RT-S, JV, EW and JCY with additional patient recruitment from the Longitudinally to Identify Predictive Surrogate Endpoints (ECLIPSE) study investigators. Images were assessed by MCW, JTM and EvB. Data were analysed by MCW, LDE and WM. The manuscript was prepared by MCW, WM, JTM, DEN and LDE. Critical revision of the manuscript was provided by AA, PB, PMAC, BC, HOC, CC, DAL, BEM, SR, EKS, RT-S, EvB, JV, EW and JCY. MCW and WM were responsible for the overall content of the manuscript as guarantors.

  • Funding GlaxoSmithKline. MCW is supported by a British Heart Foundation Clinical Research and Training Fellowship (FS/11/14/28692) and DEN holds the British Heart Foundation John Wheatley Chair of Cardiology (CH/09/002). The Centre for Cardiovascular Science is the recipient of a British Heart Foundation Centre of Research Excellence Award (RE/08/001). The Clinical Research Imaging Centre is supported by NHS Research Scotland (NRS) through NHS Lothian.

  • Competing interests The ECLIPSE study was supported by GSK.

  • Patient consent Obtained.

  • Ethics approval Ethical approval from institutional ethics committees in each of the centres.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.