Relationship Between Inflammatory Readings and the Degree of Coronary Atherosclerosis (Pilot Study)
Date Issued | Volume | Issue | Start Page | End Page |
---|---|---|---|---|
2025-01-01 | 14 | 1 | 1 | 32 |
Article No. 122
This article belongs to the Special Issue Coronary Heart Disease: Causes, Diagnosis and Management.
Background/Objectives: Some calculated total blood count readings are investigated as novel additional readings to help with evaluation of personalized CAD patients’ clinical management and prognosis. We aimed to investigate the association between readings such as NLR, MLR, PLR, NMR, LMR, MHR, SII, and SIRI and the severity of CAD in patients with SAP. Methods: This retrospective pilot study included 166 patients. All patients underwent CA or CCTA, or both, to assess severity of CAD. Patients were divided three ways: (1) according to presence (n = 146) or absence (n = 20) of CAD; (2) according to Gensini score; (3) according to the CAD-RADS score. Results: Patients with CAD had lower LMR, higher NLR, SIRI, MLR, and SII compared to patients without CAD (p < 0.001 and p = 0.018, respectively for SII). According to the CAD severity by Gensini score, the NLR, MLR, SII, and SIRI values increase and LMR decreases gradually with severity of CAD (p < 0.001). A moderate correlation was found between SII (r = 0.511, p < 0.001), NLR (r = 0.567, p < 0.001), and SIRI (r = 0.474, p < 0.001) and severity of CAD according to Gensini score. MLR and LMR had a low corelation with severity of CAD according to Gensini score (r = 0.356, p < 0.001; r = −0.355, p < 0.001, respectively). The CAD-RADS score weakly correlated with NLR and MHR (r = 0.365, p < 0.001; r = 0.346, p < 0.001, respectively), and moderately with LMR, MLR, and SIRI (r = −0.454, p < 0.001; r = 0.455, p < 0.001; r = 0.522, p < 0.001, respectively). Conclusions: NLR, LMR, and SIRI appear to be potential predictors of chronic inflammation, and SIRI is the best predictor of the degree of atherosclerosis of all the other assessed blood parameters.