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Table 2 Odds ratio of poor collateralization in diabetic patients

From: High serum levels of N-epsilon-carboxymethyllysine are associated with poor coronary collateralization in type 2 diabetic patients with chronic total occlusion of coronary artery

Tertiles of CML (n, range ng/ml)

Poor CCV, n (%)

Crude OR (95% CI)

aAdjusted OR (95% CI)

Patients categorized according to the Rentrop classification

Tertile 1 (n = 80, < 38.76)

19 (23.75)

1

1

Tertile 2 (n = 80, 38.76–95.75)

37 (46.25)

2.763 (1.404–5.437) *

2.556 (1.161–5.624) *

Tertile 3 (n = 82, > 95.75)

51 (62.20)

5.282 (2.672–10.441) **

6.802 (2.980–15.526)**

Per tertile

–

2.278 (1.626–3.192)**

2.610 (1.729–3.941)**

P value for tertile trend

 < 0.001

 < 0.001

 < 0.001

Patients categorized according to the Werner classification

Tertile 1 (n = 80, < 38.76)

53 (66.25)

1

1

Tertile 2 (n = 80, 38.76–95.75)

62 (77.50)

1.755 (0.871–3.534)

1.206 (0.529–2.748)

Tertile 3 (n = 82, > 95.75)

78 (95.12)

9.934 (3.285–30.038)**

9.701 (2.898–32.472)**

Per tertile

/

2.683 (1.719–4.189) **

2.510 (1.534–4.106) **

P value for tertile trend

 < 0.001

 < 0.001

 < 0.001

  1. CCV coronary collateral vessel, CI confidence interval, OR odds ratio
  2. *P < 0.05; **P < 0.001
  3. aMultiple-adjustment for gender, age, body mass index, hypertension, smoke, HbA1c, estimated glomerular filtration rate, total-to-HDL cholesterol ratio and serum level of high sensitive C reactive protein