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Identification of Asymptomatic Patients at Very High Cardiovascular Risk: Contribution of a Strategy Based on Carotid and Coronary Explorations, Compared to Simple Risk Calculation Using the European "SCORE 2" Algorithm. (IDEA-CVR)
Sponsor: Elsan
Summary
To prevent myocardial infarction ( MI), coronary atheroma development by LDL-cholesterol deposition in the arterial wall is the basis. Since atheromatous plaques develop slowly before becoming symptomatic, their early detection in asymptomatic patients and the implementation of an effective strategy to prevent their progression constitute the most promising primary prevention strategy. In younger subjects, the main modifiable pro-atheromatous factors are smoking and an excessively high LDL-C level, partly genetically predetermined, but also favored by a diet too rich in saturated fats and a lack of physical activity. In the French national MI registry, the average age of patients is 62 years (Arch Cardiovasc Dis 2021 Oct;114(10):647-655). Half of MIs therefore occur at working age due to rupture of atheromatous plaques, which had developed during the months/years preceding the acute event. According to the latest recommendations of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) on CV prevention published in August 2021, the visualization of coronary or carotid atheromatous plaques justifies considering the patient as having atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD), and automatically places them in the "very high CV risk" category, with an LDL-cholesterol target of \<0.55 g/L. However, these recommendations do not clearly define the criteria justifying the use of imaging in asymptomatic patients. In current practice, CV risk stratification for asymptomatic patients with no prior CV disease is currently based on risk calculation using the European "SCORE 2" algorithm, available online. It allows the calculation of the absolute risk in % of occurrence of a fatal or non-fatal CV event (myocardial infarction, stroke) over 10 years. The main objective of this study is to describe patients reclassified as "very high CV risk" following the detection of atheroma plaques formed in relation to their risk level estimated by SCORE2.
Official title: Identification of Asymptomatic Patients at Very High Cardiovascular Risk: Contribution of a Strategy Based on Carotid and Coronary Explorations, Compared to Simple Risk Calculation Using the European "SCORE 2" Algorithm.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
40 Years - 80 Years
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
1000
Start Date
2021-09-12
Completion Date
2026-01-20
Last Updated
2025-11-28
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
SCORE2
the European algorithm "SCORE 2", available online (figure 1). It allows the calculation of the absolute risk in % of occurrence of a fatal or non-fatal CV event (myocardial infarction, stroke) over 10 years.
Locations (1)
Polyclinqiue de Poitiers
Poitiers, France