Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases (Nov 2017)

Comparison of the ACC/AHA and Framingham algorithms to assess cardiovascular risk in HIV-infected patients

  • Lauro Ferreira da Silva Pinto Neto,
  • Fernanda Rezende Dias,
  • Flavia Feres Bressan,
  • Carolina Rocio Oliveira Santos

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 6
pp. 577 – 580

Abstract

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The aim of this study was to compare the predictions of Framingham cardiovascular (CV) risk score (FRS) and the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) risk score in an HIV outpatient clinic in the city of Vitoria, Espirito Santo, Brazil. In a cross-sectional study 341 HIV infected patients over 40 years old consecutively recruited were interviewed. Cohen's kappa coefficient was used to assess agreement between the two algorithms. 61.3% were stratified as low risk by Framingham score, compared with 54% by ACC/AHA score (Spearman correlation 0.845; p < 0.000). Only 26.1% were classified as cardiovascular high risk by Framingham compared to 46% by ACC/AHA score (Kappa = 0.745; p < 0.039). Only one out of eight patients had cardiovascular high risk by Framingham at the time of a myocardial infarction event registered up to five years before the study period. Both cardiovascular risk scores but especially Framingham underestimated high-risk patients in this HIV-infected population. Keywords: Cardiovascular disease, HIV, Co-morbidities, Non-AIDS events