| Literature DB >> 25930055 |
Rajiv Chowdhury1, Dewan S Alam, Ismail Ibrahim Fakir, Sheikh Daud Adnan, Aliya Naheed, Ishrat Tasmin, Md Mostafa Monower, Farzana Hossain, Fatema Mahjabin Hossain, Md Mostafizur Rahman, Sadia Afrin, Anjan Kumar Roy, Minara Akter, Sima Akter Sume, Ajoy Kumer Biswas, Lisa Pennells, Praveen Surendran, Robin D Young, Sarah A Spackman, Khaled Hasan, Eric Harshfield, Nasir Sheikh, Richard Houghton, Danish Saleheen, Joanna M M Howson, Adam S Butterworth, Rubhana Raqib, Abdulla Al Shafi Majumder, John Danesh, Emanuele Di Angelantonio.
Abstract
During recent decades, Bangladesh has experienced a rapid epidemiological transition from communicable to non-communicable diseases. Coronary heart disease (CHD), with myocardial infarction (MI) as its main manifestation, is a major cause of death in the country. However, there is limited reliable evidence about its determinants in this population. The Bangladesh Risk of Acute Vascular Events (BRAVE) study is an epidemiological bioresource established to examine environmental, genetic, lifestyle and biochemical determinants of CHD among the Bangladeshi population. By early 2015, the ongoing BRAVE study had recruited over 5000 confirmed first-ever MI cases, and over 5000 controls "frequency-matched" by age and sex. For each participant, information has been recorded on demographic factors, lifestyle, socioeconomic, clinical, and anthropometric characteristics. A 12-lead electrocardiogram has been recorded. Biological samples have been collected and stored, including extracted DNA, plasma, serum and whole blood. Additionally, for the 3000 cases and 3000 controls initially recruited, genotyping has been done using the CardioMetabochip+ and the Exome+ arrays. The mean age (standard deviation) of MI cases is 53 (10) years, with 88 % of cases being male and 46 % aged 50 years or younger. The median interval between reported onset of symptoms and hospital admission is 5 h. Initial analyses indicate that Bangladeshis are genetically distinct from major non-South Asian ethnicities, as well as distinct from other South Asian ethnicities. The BRAVE study is well-placed to serve as a powerful resource to investigate current and future hypotheses relating to environmental, biochemical and genetic causes of CHD in an important but under-studied South Asian population.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25930055 PMCID: PMC4516898 DOI: 10.1007/s10654-015-0037-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Epidemiol ISSN: 0393-2990 Impact factor: 8.082
Fig. 1Location of the collaborating and recruitment centres in Dhaka
Fig. 2BRAVE study flow diagram of surveillance, enrolment and data collection
Summary of questionnaire-based information collected
| Characteristics | Availability of information |
|---|---|
| Demographic and lifestyle factors | Age at onset, gender, tobacco use (cigarette or non-cigarette), exposure to environmental tobacco, detailed dietary habits, and levels of physical activity |
| Socio economic factors | Education, occupation, objects owned, total income, marital status, family size, indoor air pollution, sources of drinking water |
| Economic burden of MI | Personal cost associated with the current event (treatment and accommodation), source of referral, transportation costs, costs of attendants, sources of payment |
| Knowledge and awareness | Levels of knowledge and perception of cardiovascular disease, risk factors (such as smoking, diabetes and blood pressure), prevention and practices would be assessed among controls |
| Psychosocial factors | Stress at work and home, social support, depression and life events; sleeping habits |
| Women’s health | Use of hormonal contraceptives, menstrual and pregnancy history |
| Medical history | Cardiovascular disease, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, atrial fibrillation, cancer, hypercholesterolemia, current medication use including regularity of antihypertensive intake, other vascular disease, infectious disease, major surgery and family history |
| Physical measurements | Blood pressure at baseline, heart rate, height, weight, waist and hip circumferences |
| Coronary assessment | Time to initiate thrombolysis, detailed recording of cardiac work-up (e.g. ECG changes/ECHO), reversal of symptoms and ST segment elevation by >50 % on streptokinase infusion, cardiac marker (Troponin I) |
| MI Subtype | Based on clinical assessment and ECG/ECHO findings subtypes of MI are recorded (such as, anterior, antero-septal, inferior, lateral, posterior, right ventricle or non ST elevated MI) |
| Course in hospital and status | Treatments given, adverse events (if any), outcomes in hospital |
ECG electrocardiogram, ECHO echocardiogram, MI myocardial infarction
Information collected on dietary intake
| Food group | Routinely recorded information | Relevant key information recorded to reflect local habits |
|---|---|---|
| Rice | Type and amount of rice | Steamed rice (hand pounded) e.g., sada bhat; mixed rice such as biriyani, polau and tehari |
| Bread | Type and numbers of bread slices | Wheat bread e.g., ruti; recording type flour bread, e.g., chapatti; oil coded, e.g., porotha or luchi; white bread such as pauruti |
| Other carbohydrates | Potato and sugar | Consumption of aloo and chini |
| Meat and poultry | Chicken, eggs, liver, beef, mutton, and lamb | Type of chicken, e.g., caged (farmed) or free-range (deshi); method of cooking, e.g., grilled or curried |
| Fish | Type and amount of fish | Source such as sweet or saline water fish |
| Dairy | Milk, butter and margarine and other dairy products | Misti (dairy-based dessert); doi (yogurt-based dessert) |
| Vegetables | Types and amount | Cooked or raw vegatables; green leafy, yellow, cruciferus, salad vegetable subtypes |
| Pulses | Lentil subtypes | Local lentil produce e.g., muger dal, musurir dal, buter dal |
| Spices | Types and amount used in traditional cooking | Cumin (jeera), Ginger (ada), turmeric (holud) and garlic (roshun) |
| Fruits | Types and amount | Seperately for locally grown and imported fruits |
| Fast foods | Types and amount | Source (bought or home-made); local recipe (e.g., puri, singara, samosa, kabab) and Western recipe (e.g., burger, pizza, sandwich, cakes) |
| Drinks | Tea, coffee, soft drinks, alcohol | Local beverages such as lassi; local alcoholic preparations; type of sugar-sweetened beverages, such as carbonated and noncarbonated drinks |
| Cooking medium | Cooking oil (recording type)l | Common local vegetable oil such as palm oil; refined vegetable oil such as Banaspati or dalda; purified butter oil (such as ghee); oil purchase circumstance such as bought from open (unpurified) sources (“khola tel”) versus as closed container |
Biological measurements planned or in progress
| Approach | Analytical strategy |
|---|---|
| (1) | |
| CardioMetabochip + array | ~210,000 SNPs of interest for cardiovascular disease traits. |
| Exome + array | ~420,000 SNVs, mostly low frequency and rare coding variants |
| Sequencing | High-depth sequencing |
| (2) | |
| Cardiometabolic analytes | Total cholesterol, HDL-C, LDL-C, triglycerides, HbA1c, Lp(a) |
| Toxic heavy metals | Total arsenic, arsenic metabolites, copper, lead, cadmium, and mercury |
SNPs single nucleotide polymorphisms, SNVs single nucleotide variants, HDL-C high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, LDL-C low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, HbA1c haemoglobin A1c, Lp (a) lipoprotein (a)
Baseline characteristics of the initial participants recruited
| Characteristic | Cases | Controls |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | Mean (SD) or % | N | Mean (SD) or % | ||
| Age (years) | 4500 | 52.6 (10.4) | 4500 | 50.4 (10.1) | Matched |
|
| |||||
| Males | 3950 | 88 | 3935 | 87 | |
| Females | 550 | 12 | 565 | 13 | Matched |
|
| |||||
| Never | 630 | 15 | 1383 | 31 | |
| Ex | 246 | 6 | 301 | 7 | |
| Current | 3224 | 79 | 2811 | 63 | <0.001 |
|
| |||||
| Yes | 1090 | 24 | 470 | 10 | |
| No | 3404 | 76 | 4027 | 90 | <0.001 |
|
| |||||
| Yes | 778 | 17 | 359 | 8 | |
| No | 3716 | 83 | 4138 | 92 | <0.001 |
|
| |||||
| Yes | 597 | 13 | 267 | 6 | |
| No/Unknown | 3903 | 87 | 4233 | 94 | <0.001 |
|
| |||||
| Urban | 1891 | 47 | 2183 | 49 | |
| Rural | 2142 | 53 | 2282 | 51 | 0.065 |
|
| |||||
| No schooling | 1390 | 34 | 1576 | 35 | |
| Primary | 1269 | 31 | 1297 | 29 | |
| Secondary | 944 | 23 | 1107 | 25 | |
| Vocation/University | 454 | 11 | 518 | 12 | 0.093 |
| Blood lipids measurements | |||||
| Total cholesterol (mmol/l) | 4188 | 5.14 (1.14) | 4130 | 4.77 (1.00) | <0.001 |
| LDL-C (mmol/l) | 4188 | 3.19 (1.03) | 4128 | 2.76 (0.86) | <0.001 |
| HDL-C (mmol/l) | 4188 | 0.85 (0.22) | 4130 | 0.87 (0.22) | <0.001 |
† p value obtained from t test for continuous variables or Chi squared test for categorical variables. ‡ Mother and/or father
HDL-C high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, LDL-C low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, MI myocardial infarction
Fig. 3Genetic ancestry in the BRAVE population derived from Principal Component Analysis. The figures above indicate that Bangladeshis (i.e. the BRAVE study participants and those in the BEB 1000 Genomes study) cluster separately from major non-South Asian populations (a) and other South Asian (b) ethnic groups. BRAVE indicates the Bangladeshis from BRAVE study participants. The colours of points refer to the self-reported ethnicities in the BRAVE (n = 5756 and the 1000 Genomes (n = 2504) study participants: SAN, South Asians; ASN, East Asians; EUR, Europeans; AMR, admixed Americans; AFR, Africans; BEB, Bengalis in Bangladesh (Non-BRAVE); GIH, Gujrati Indians in Houston, US; ITU, Indian Telegus in the UK; PJL, Pakistani Punjabis in Pakistan; STU, Sri Lankan Tamils in the UK. Scatterplot are of the first 2 principal components. C1, first principal component; and C2, second principal component