| Literature DB >> 26637172 |
Douglas G Manuel1,2,3,4,5,6, Meltem Tuna1,2, Richard Perez1,2, Peter Tanuseputro2,5, Deirdre Hennessy1,3, Carol Bennett1,2, Laura Rosella2,7,8, Claudia Sanmartin3, Carl van Walraven1,2,5,9, Jack V Tu2,10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Health behaviours, important factors in cardiovascular disease, are increasingly a focus of prevention. We appraised whether stroke risk can be accurately assessed using self-reported information focused on health behaviours.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26637172 PMCID: PMC4670216 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0143342
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
SPoRT index of health behaviour and stress.
| Risk Factor | Description | Male index | Female index |
|---|---|---|---|
| Smoking | |||
| Heavy smoker | Daily current smoker (≥1 pack/day) | 3 | 4 |
| Light smoker | Daily current smoker (<1 pack/day) | 2 | 3 |
| Former smoker | Former daily smoker | 1 | 1 |
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| Alcohol | |||
| Heavy drinker | >21 (men) or >14 (women) drinks/week in previous month or weekly bingeing behaviour | 1 | 2 |
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| Light drinker | 0 to 4 (men) or 0 to 2 (women) drinks/week | 0 | 1 |
| Occasional drinker | <1 drink/month | 0 | 1 |
| Current non-drinker | No alcohol consumption in the last 12 months | 1 | 2 |
| Physical activity | |||
| Inactive | 0 to <1.5 METs/day | 2 | 1 |
| Moderately active | 1.5 to <3 METs/day | 1 | 0 |
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| ≥ |
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| Diet | |||
| Poor diet | <7 weekly fruit and vegetable serving | 2 | 2 |
| Fair diet | 7 to <14 weekly fruit and vegetable serving | 1 | 1 |
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| ≥ 14 weekly fruit and vegetable serving |
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| Stress | |||
| High stress | Self-perceived stress: ‘quite a bit’ or ‘extremely’ | 1 | 2 |
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| 9 | 11 |
Each point on the SPoRT Behaviour Score increases stroke risk by 12% for males or 14% for females (see full model on Table 2). The maximum score for males equals a 180% (9 x 12%) risk difference compared to the lowest score; 340% (11 x 14%) for females.
*Reference group is in italics.
† Bingeing was defined as ≥5 drinks/day on any occasion.
‡METs are Metabolic Equivalent of Task (kcal/kg/day). For example, the “inactive” physical activity is equal to walking for exercise less than 30 min per day (3 METS/hr).
Fig 1Predicted 5-year risk of stroke by age group and SPoRT behavioural index value.
Stroke Population Risk Tool (SPoRT)–Model.
| Hazard Ratio (95% CI) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Male Model | Female Model | |
| Age | 1.11 (1.09–1.13) | 1.11 (1.09–1.12) |
| Age spline (65 years) | 0.97 (0.95–0.99) | |
| Age time (per year) | 0.997 (0.995–0.9999) | 0.996(0.993–0.997) |
| SPoRT Behaviour Score | 1.12 (1.07–1.17) | 1.15 (1.11–1.19) |
| Hypertension | ||
| No | 1.0 [Reference] | 1.0 [Reference] |
| Yes | 1.37(1.16–1.60) | 1.39 (1.20–1.61) |
| Missing | 0.80 (0.11–5.88) | 1.53 (0.24–9.84) |
| Heart Disease | ||
| No | 1.0 [Reference] | 1.0 [Reference] |
| Yes | 1.36 (1.14–1.63) | 1.44 (1.22–1.71) |
| Diabetes | ||
| No | 1.0 [Reference] | 1.0 [Reference] |
| Yes | 1.29 (1.06–1.57) | 1.74 (1.45–2.09) |
| Missing | –- | |
| Survey cycle | ||
| 3.1 (2005) | 1.0 [Reference] | 1.0 [Reference] |
| 2.1 (2003) | 1.03 (0.85–1.26) | 1.05 (0.87–1.26) |
| 1.1 (2001) | 1.26 (1.04–1.53) | 1.18 (0.99–1.42) |
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| Discrimination | ||
| C-stat (95% CI) | 0.85 (0.83–0.86) | 0.87 (0.85–0.88) |
| Ratio of 75 to 25 risk percentile (5-year risk range) | 13.3 (0.11 to 1.40) | 14.0 (0.08 to 1.07) |
| Ratio of 95 to 5 risk percentile | 149.7 (0.03 to 4.79) | 179.2 (0.026 to 4.70) |
| Calibration | ||
| Subgroup differences No. (%) | 2 (3.0) | 4 (5.7) |
*The full model was calibrated to survey cycle year
**0–9 for males, 0–11 for females
† Observed versus predicted estimates were compared for 67 subgroups—selected based on meeting the criteria of having more than 5% of total observed stroke events (i.e., more than 22 events). We report the number of subgroups where there was a clinically important difference (predefined as ≥ 20% difference) in observed versus predicted number of events. The 67 subgroups were: deciles of predicted risk (4), local health networks (9), age (7), body mass index (4), physical activity (3), alcohol consumption (6), smoking (4), diet (3), self perceived stress (4), ethnicity (1), family income (7), family education (4), high blood pressure (2), diabetes (2), heart disease (2) SPoRT Behaviour Score (5)
‡ Observed versus predicted estimates were compared for 65 subgroups—selected based on meeting the criteria of having more than 5% of total observed stroke events (i.e., more than 23 events). We report the number of subgroups where there was a clinically important difference (predefined as ≥ 20% difference) in observed versus predicted number of events. The 65 subgroups examined were: deciles (4), local health networks (8), age (6), body mass index (5), physical activity (3), alcohol consumption (5), smoking (4), diet (3), self perceived stress (4), ethnicity (1), family income (7), family education (3), high blood pressure (2), diabetes (2), heart disease (2), SPoRT Behaviour Score (6).
Fig 2Observed versus predicted risk of 5-year incident stoke by risk decile—derivation and validation cohorts.
Panel A = males; Panel B = females. *Statistically significant difference between observed and predicted risk.
Fig 3Observed versus predicted risk of 5-year incident stoke by health behaviour, BMI, and stress.
Panel A = males; Panel B = females.
Fig 4Secondary analysis—observed (O) versus predicted (P) risk of 5-year incident stoke by risk decile, combined development and validation cohorts.
Panel A = males; Panel B = females. Abbreviations: O = observed; P = predicted. *Primary outcome.