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Alteration of the Risk of CArdiovascular DIseases After Pneumonia (ARCADIA)

N

Nantes University Hospital (NUH)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Pneumonia
Cardiovascular Disease (CKD)

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07357116
RC24_0112_1

Details and patient eligibility

About

Pneumonia can be acquired in the community (CAP) or during hospitalization (HAP). It is a leading cause of communicable diseases and the second cause of disability-adjusted life-years in the world (Roquilly et al., Shankar-Hari et al.). HAP is a common infectious disease, affecting up to 40% of patients on mechanical ventilation. It is a major global concern, with 500,000 cases treated annually in Europe. Despite European guidelines, the incidence remains high (Roquilly et al.), leading to significant medical consequences. Thanks to improved early detection and appropriate medical management, pneumonia-related mortality has steadily declined over the past decades. As a result, the number of patients surviving with potential long-term sequelae has increased, with risks of pulmonary function abnormalities, psychological disorders, and impaired quality of life (Shankar-Hari et al., Sipilä et al., Corrales-Medina et al., Ahmed et al.).

Cardiovascular and respiratory diseases (CVRD) are the most common pre-existing conditions in patients with pneumonia, with up to 40% of patients presenting these comorbidities at the time of pneumonia diagnosis (Roquilly et al., Nojiri et al.). The risk of severe cardiovascular and respiratory events increases after pneumonia recovery, with 14% of patients developing a CVRD event within the first year post-infection (Corrales-Medina et al., Herridge et al.), representing a 40% relative increase in CVRD risk compared to patients with CVRD without infection (Lai et al., Angriman et al.).

The objective of the ARCADIA study is to describe the incidence of cardiovascular diseases (CVD) in individuals surviving pneumonia and to compare it to that of patients with similar predisposing comorbidities for CVD but without a history of pneumonia. The investigators hypothesize that pneumonia is a cause of CVD so that patients with a history of pneumonia have a higher risk of developing CVD.

Full description

Pneumonia is a leading cause of communicable diseases and the second cause of disability-adjusted life-years in the world (Roquilly et al., Shankar-Hari et al.). Pneumonia can be acquired in the community (community-acquired pneumonia, CAP) or during hospitalization (nosocomial, or Hospital-acquired pneumonia, HAP). CAP is classically induced by virulent bacteria (such as Streptococcus pneumoniae) or viruses (Flu), and new pathogenic viruses such as SARS-CoV2 (COVID-19) can rapidly diffuse in the population.

HAP is a common infectious disease, affecting up to 40% of patients on mechanical ventilation. It is a major global concern, with 500,000 cases treated annually in Europe. Despite European guidelines, the incidence remains high (Roquilly et al.), leading to significant medical consequences. Thanks to improved early detection and appropriate medical management, pneumonia-related mortality has steadily declined over the past decades. As a result, the number of patients surviving with potential long-term sequelae has increased, with risks of pulmonary function abnormalities, psychological disorders, and impaired quality of life (Shankar-Hari et al., Sipilä et al., Corrales-Medina et al., Ahmed et al.).

Cardiovascular and respiratory diseases (CVRD) are the most common pre-existing conditions in patients with pneumonia, with up to 40% of patients presenting these comorbidities at the time of pneumonia diagnosis (Roquilly et al., Nojiri et al.). The risk of severe cardiovascular and respiratory events increases after pneumonia recovery, with 14% of patients developing a CVRD event within the first year post-infection (Corrales-Medina et al., Herridge et al.), representing a 40% relative increase in CVRD risk compared to patients with CVRD without infection (Lai et al., Angriman et al.).

The ARCADIA study is part of the HOMI-LUNG project, funded by the Horizon Europe program. HOMI-LUNG is an international and interdisciplinary initiative aiming to better understand the causal links between respiratory infections (such as pneumonia) and the progression of CVRD. Specifically, the project seeks to quantify the burden of CVRD following pneumonia, assess patient acceptability of long-term health alterations, and define pneumonia endotypes with distinct pathobiological mechanisms associated with CVRD exacerbation.

The objective of the ARCADIA study is to describe the incidence of cardiovascular diseases (CVD) in individuals surviving pneumonia and to compare it to that of patients with similar predisposing comorbidities for CVD but without a history of pneumonia. The investigators hypothesize that pneumonia is a cause of CVD so that patients with a history of pneumonia have a higher risk of developing CVD.

Enrollment

2,000,000 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Be at least 18 years of age in the month of the index date.
  • Exposed group: participants who declared pneumonia between January 1, 2015 and November 30, 2024.
  • Unexposed group: participants who did not declare pneumonia between January 1, 2015 and index date and being selected after matching on age, sex, CVD history, chronic kidney disease, diabetes, antihypertensive deliveries, obesity, lipid-lowering treatments, alcohol and tobacco consumption.

Exclusion criteria

  • Declared pneumonia between January 1, 2012 and December 31, 2014.
  • Pneumonia before the age of 18 between January 1, 2015, and the index date.
  • Organ transplant receiver for any of the following organs before or within one year after the index date: heart, kidney, lung, liver, and pancreas.
  • Identifier that cannot be reliably tracked in the SNDS (such as a fictitious or provisional identifier, or an identifier that, under specific regimen, fails to distinguish same-sex twins in hospital records).
  • Death during index hospitalization.

Trial design

2,000,000 participants in 2 patient groups

Exposed group
Description:
Exposure is defined as having reported any kind of pneumonia during the inclusion period. Once a participant has developed pneumonia, he or she belongs to the exposed group throughout the follow-up period.
Unexposed group
Description:
The unexposed group is made up of participants who have not developed pneumonia prior to inclusion and who have been matched to a participant in the exposed group on selected confounders.

Trial contacts and locations

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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