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Letter

Carotid intima-media thickness and endothelial function: useful surrogate markers for establishing cardiovascular risk in patients with inflammatory rheumatic disease – authors' response

Jet JCS Veldhuijzen van Zanten1,2 and George D Kitas1,2 email

School of Sport and Exercise Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, B15 2TT, UK

Department of Rheumatology, Dudley Group of Hospitals NHS Trust, Pensnett Road, Dudley, DY1 2HQ, UK

author email corresponding author email

Arthritis Research & Therapy 2008, 10:404doi:10.1186/ar2410

Published: 16 May 2008


See related editorial by Veldhuijzen van Zanten and Kitas, http://arthritis-research.com/content/10/1/102 and related letter by Gonzalez-Gay et al, http://arthritis-research.com/content/10/3/403

First paragraph (this article has no abstract)

We thank Gonzalez-Juanatey and colleagues [1] for their response to our editorial [2]. They refer to their interesting recent work [3], reporting that carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) is associated with future cardiovascular events in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Although this is potentially important, because this was a longitudinal observational study conducted over a 5-year period of follow up, there are some shortcomings that may be of significance. The cohort (47 patients) and number of events (8) were small, allowing for statistical error. Patients who developed cardiovascular events not only had significantly higher carotid IMT but were also significantly older than those who did not; greater age is associated with both carotid IMT and cardiovascular event risk [4]. This, together with other possible confounders, might have had a major impact on the results. The degree of systemic inflammation in patients when carotid IMT was assessed and during follow up was not presented. One of those patients who developed a cardiovascular event appears to have been an extreme outlier with a very high carotid IMT. Did that patient have a particularly high inflammatory load at the time of assessment?


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