학술논문

Relationship between different cardiovascular risk scores and measures of subclinical atherosclerosis in an Indian population
Document Type
article
Source
Indian Heart Journal, Vol 67, Iss 4, Pp 332-340 (2015)
Subject
Atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease
Primary prevention
Risk stratification
Surgery
RD1-811
Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system
RC666-701
Language
English
ISSN
0019-4832
Abstract
Background: Relative accuracy of the various currently available cardiovascular (CV) risk assessment algorithms in Indian patients is not known. Methods: This study included 194 consecutive patients (mean age 49.6 ± 10.3 years, 84.5% males) attending a CV disease prevention clinic at a tertiary center in north India. Four risk assessment models [Framingham Risk score (RiskFRS), American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association pooled cohort equations (RiskACC/AHA), the 3rd iteration of Joint British Societies' risk calculator (RiskJBS) and the World Health Organization/International Society of Hypertension risk prediction charts (RiskWHO)] were applied. The estimated risk scores were correlated with carotid intima-media thickness (CIMT) and coronary calcium score (CCS) using nonparametric statistics (Chi-square test, Kruskal–Wallis test and Spearman rank correlation). Results: Overall, RiskACC/AHA and RiskWHO significantly underestimated CV risk as compared to RiskJBS and RiskFRS, with RiskJBS being the least likely to underestimate the risk (patients with coronary artery disease who were found to have ≥20% CV risk- 21.4% with RiskACC/AHA, 17.9% with RiskWHO, 41.4% with RiskFRS, and 58.6% with RiskJBS). Further, only RiskJBS and RiskFRS, but not RiskACC/AHA and RiskWHO, demonstrated consistent relationship with CIMT and CCS (Spearman rho 0.45 and 0.46 for RiskJBS and 0.39 and 0.36 for RiskFRS for CIMT and CCS respectively, all p values