Personality as independent predictor of long-term mortality in patients with coronary heart disease

J Denollet, H Rombouts, TC Gillebert, DL Brutsaert…�- The Lancet, 1996 - thelancet.com
J Denollet, H Rombouts, TC Gillebert, DL Brutsaert, SU Sys, N Stroobant
The Lancet, 1996thelancet.com
Background Emotional distress has been related to mortality in patients with coronary heart
disease (CHD), but little is known about the role of personality in long-term prognosis. We
postulated that type-D personality (the tendency to suppress emotional distress) was a
predictor of long-term mortality in CHD, independently of established biomedical risk factors.
Methods We studied 268 men and 35 women with angiographically documented CHD, aged
31-79 years, who were taking part in an outpatient rehabilitation programme. All patients�…
Abstract
Background Emotional distress has been related to mortality in patients with coronary heart disease (CHD), but little is known about the role of personality in long-term prognosis. We postulated that type-D personality (the tendency to suppress emotional distress) was a predictor of long-term mortality in CHD, independently of established biomedical risk factors.
Methods We studied 268 men and 35 women with angiographically documented CHD, aged 31-79 years, who were taking part in an outpatient rehabilitation programme. All patients completed personality questionnaires at entry to the programme. We contacted them 6-10 years later (mean 7�9) to find out survival status. The main endpoint was death from all causes.
Findings At follow-up, 38 patients had died; there were 24 cardiac deaths. The rate of death was higher for type-D patients than for those without type-D (23 [27%]/85 vs 15 [7%]/218; p<0�00001). The association between type-D personality and mortality was still evident more than 5 years after the coronary event and was found in both men and women. Mortality was also associated with impaired left ventricular function, three-vessel disease, low exercise tolerance, and the lack of thrombolytic therapy after myocardial infarction. When we controlled for these biomedical predictors in multiple logistic regression analysis, the impact of type-D remained significant (odds ratio 4�1 [95% Cl 1�9-8�8]; p=0�0004). In this group of CHD patients, type-D was an independent predictor of both cardiac and non-cardiac mortality. Social alienation and depression were also related to mortality, but did not add to the predictive power of type-D.
Interpretation We found that type-D personality was a significant predictor of long-term mortality in patients with established CHD, independently of biomedical risk factors. Personality traits should be taken into account in the association between emotional distress and mortality in CHD.
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