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High prevalence of peripheral and carotid artery disease in patients with interstitial lung diseases.

VASA. Zeitschrift fur Gefasskrankheiten

Authors: Max Jonathan Stumpf, Max Fabian Fleddermann, Marina Michaela Luise Wirtz, Leonie Biener, Leonie Weinhold, Nadjib Schahab, Marcel Weber, Georg Nickenig, Dirk Skowasch, Christian Alexander Schaefer, Carmen Pizarro

Interstitial lung diseases (ILD) are a heterogenous group of diseases, which have pulmonary fibrosis, restrictive lung disease, and decreased diffusion capacity as a common final path. Premature death frequently results not from ILD itself but from comorbidities. Peripheral artery disease (PAD) is a common comorbid disease in different chronic lung diseases. The focus of the present study is to clarify the prevalence of PAD in ILD. A total of 97 patients with ILD and 30 controls were included in the study. Patients with ILD were subdivided into two groups according to the progression of pulmonary fibrosis: progressive fibrosing and non-progressive fibrosing ILD (PF-ILD and nPF-ILD, respectively). All participants underwent standard angiological and pneumological diagnostic procedures including six-minute walking test, measurement of ankle-brachial-index, and colour-coded duplex sonography. We observed no relevant differences in the baseline characteristics except age. Both, PF-ILD and nPF-ILD patients, presented with a highly increased incidence of atherosclerotic lesions compared to the control group (<0.001). PAD was present in all patients with PF-ILD and in 73% of patients with nPF-ILD. These results were confirmed by age-adjusted regression analyses. The present results indicate that ILD is an independent risk factor for atherosclerosis. Patients with PF-ILD are more severely affected than nPF-ILD patients with age as a confounding variable. Atherogenesis in ILD may be mediated by increased cardiovascular risk, systemic inflammation and chronic hypoxemia.

PMID: 36974466

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