| Literature DB >> 23935815 |
Gitanjali M Singh1, Goodarz Danaei, Farshad Farzadfar, Gretchen A Stevens, Mark Woodward, David Wormser, Stephen Kaptoge, Gary Whitlock, Qing Qiao, Sarah Lewington, Emanuele Di Angelantonio, Stephen Vander Hoorn, Carlene M M Lawes, Mohammed K Ali, Dariush Mozaffarian, Majid Ezzati.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The effects of systolic blood pressure (SBP), serum total cholesterol (TC), fasting plasma glucose (FPG), and body mass index (BMI) on the risk of cardiovascular diseases (CVD) have been established in epidemiological studies, but consistent estimates of effect sizes by age and sex are not available.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23935815 PMCID: PMC3728292 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0065174
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Outcomes associated with each risk factor, studies from which RRs were extracted, and procedures for estimating RRs by age group.
| Disease outcome | Studies that reported RRs | Procedures for estimating RRs in standardized age groups |
|
| ||
| Ischemic heart disease (IHD) | PSC | Interpolation and extrapolation |
| APCSC | Interpolation and extrapolation | |
| Ischaemic stroke | PSC | Interpolation and extrapolation |
| APCSC | Interpolation and extrapolation | |
| Haemorrhagic stroke | PSC | Interpolation and extrapolation |
| APCSC | Interpolation and extrapolation | |
| Hypertensive heart disease | PSC | Redistribution from a single age group using PSC “SBP-other vascular diseases” age pattern |
| APCSC | Interpolation and extrapolation | |
| Rheumatic heart disease | PSC | Redistribution from a single age group using PSC SBP-“other vascular diseases” age pattern |
| Inflammatory heart disease | PSC | Redistribution from a single age group using PSC “SBP-other vascular diseases” age pattern |
| Aortic aneurysm | PSC | Redistribution from a single age group using PSC “SBP-other vascular diseases” age pattern |
| All other cardiovascular diseases | PSC | Redistribution from a single age group using PSC “SBP-other vascular diseases” age pattern |
| APCSC | Redistribution from a single age group using PSC “SBP-other vascular diseases” age pattern | |
|
| ||
| IHD | PSC | Interpolation and extrapolation |
| APCSC | Data provided in GBD age groups | |
| Ischemic stroke | PSC | Interpolation and extrapolation |
| APCSC | Data provided in GBD age groups | |
|
| ||
| IHD | DECODE | Interpolation and extrapolation |
| APCSC | Interpolation and extrapolation | |
| ERFC | Interpolation and extrapolation. | |
| Total stroke | DECODE | Interpolation and extrapolation |
| APCSC | Interpolation and extrapolation | |
| ERFC | Interpolation and extrapolation | |
|
| ||
| IHD | PSC | Interpolation and extrapolation |
| APCSC | Interpolation and extrapolation | |
| ERFC | Interpolation and extrapolation | |
| Ischaemic stroke | PSC | Redistribution from a single age group using PSC BMI-total stroke age pattern |
| APCSC | Interpolation and extrapolation | |
| ERFC | Interpolation and extrapolation | |
| Haemorrhagic stroke | PSC | Redistribution from a single age group using PSC BMI-total stroke age pattern |
| ERFC | Interpolation and extrapolation | |
| Diabetes | PSC | Interpolation and extrapolation |
| APCSC | Interpolation and extrapolation | |
RRs apply to mortality but not to incidence and is included because of the benefits of lower blood pressure for reduced heart failure mortality.
This residual category contains a number of ICD codes. The proportion of deaths from the constituent diseases is likely to vary across world regions and even across cohorts in the same meta-analysis.
A quadratic age model was used instead of a log-linear age model as this fit the data better.
Figure 1Relative risks (RRs) for diseases associated with systolic blood pressure (SBP).
The figure shows RRs for 10 mmHg higher usual SBP. The figure shows RRs converted to comparable age group as described in Methods. See Table S1 for RRs in original age groups from each study. RRs for rheumatic heart disease and inflammatory heart disease apply only to deaths and those for other outcomes to deaths and incidence. The percentage of variation in the pooled estimates that is due to statistical heterogeneity was evaluated using the I2 statistic for each age group and outcome. Of all outcomes and age groups analyzed, only two age groups in the pooled analysis for hemorrhagic stroke had non-zero I2 values: I2 = 44.4% for ages 35–44 years, and I2 = 24.3% for ages 55–64 years.
Figure 2Relative risks (RRs) for diseases associated with serum total cholesterol (TC).
The figure shows RRs for 1 mmol/L higher usual TC. The figure shows RRs converted to comparable age group as described in Methods. See Table S1 for RRs in original age groups from each study. The percentage of variation in the pooled estimates that is due to statistical heterogeneity was evaluated using the I2 statistic for each age group and outcome. Of all the outcomes and age groups analyzed, only ages 35–44 years in the pooled analysis for IHD had a non-zero I2 value of 58.8%.
Figure 3Relative risks (RRs) for diseases associated with body mass index (BMI).
The figure shows RRs for 5 kg/m2 higher baseline BMI. The figure shows RRs converted to comparable age group as described in Methods. See Table S1 for RRs in original age groups from each study. The percentage of variation in the pooled estimates that is due to statistical heterogeneity was evaluated using the I2 statistic for each age group and outcome. Of all the outcomes and age groups analyzed, the three age groups below age 65 years in the pooled analysis for hypertensive heart disease had non-zero I2 values: 79.2% for ages 35–44 years, 69.0% for ages 45–54 years, and 37.2% for ages 55–64 years. *The associations with haemorrhagic stroke are for BMIs above 25 kg/m2 as described in text.
Figure 4Relative risks (RRs) for diseases associated with fasting plasma glucose (FPG).
The figure shows RRs for 1 mmol/L higher usual or baseline FPG. The figure shows RRs converted to comparable age group as described in Methods. See Table S1 for RRs in original age groups from each study. The percentage of variation in the pooled estimates that is due to statistical heterogeneity was evaluated using the I2 statistic for each age group and outcome. All I2 values for these outcomes and age groups were zero.