| Title |
Prolonged QT interval predicts cardiac and all-cause mortality in the elderly. The Rotterdam Study |
| Published in |
European Heart Journal. ISSN 0195-668x. |
| Author |
Bruyne, de M.C. (Martine); Hoes, A.W. (Arno); Kors, J.A. (Jan); Bemmel, van J.H. (Jan); Grobbee, D.E. (Diederick); Hofman, A. (Albert) |
| Date |
1999-02-01 |
| Language |
English |
| Type |
article |
| Abstract |
AIMS: To examine the association between heart-rate corrected QT
prolongation and cardiac and all-cause mortality in the population-based
Rotterdam Study among men and women aged 55 years or older and to compare
the prognostic value of the QT interval, using different formulas to
correct for heart rate. METHODS AND RESULTS: After exclusion of
participants with arrhythmias or bundle branch block on the ECG, the study
population consisted of 2083 men and 3158 women. The QT interval was
computed by the Modular ECG Analysis System (MEANS). Data were analysed
using Cox' proportional hazards model. Participants in the highest
quartile of the heart-rate corrected QT interval had about a 70% age- and
sex-adjusted increased risk for both all-cause mortality (hazard ratio
(HR) 1.8; 95% CI:1.3-2.4) and cardiac mortality (HR 1.7; 95% CI:1.0-2.7)
compared to those in the lowest quartile. In women, the increased risk
associated with prolonged QT for cardiac death was more pronounced than in
men. These risk estimates did not change after adjustment for potential
confounders, including history of myocardial infarction, hypertension and
diabetes mellitus. CONCLUSION: A prolonged heart-rate corrected QT
interval is an independent predictor for cardiac and all-cause mortality
in older men and women. The risk associated with prolonged QT is hardly
affected by the heart-rate correction formula used. |
| Publication |
http://hdl.handle.net/1765/9064 |
| Persistent Identifier |
urn:NBN:nl:ui:15-1765/9064 |
| Metadata |
XML |
| Repository |
Erasmus University Rotterdam |