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Normative values for carotid intima media thickness and its progression: Are they transferrable outside of their cohort of origin?

Authors :
Liao X
Norata GD
Polak JF
Stehouwer CD
Catapano A
Rundek T
Ezhov M
Sander D
Thompson SG
Lorenz MW
Balakhonova T
Safarova M
Grigore L
Empana JP
Lin HJ
McLachlan S
Bokemark L
Ronkainen K
Schminke U
Lind L
Willeit P
Yanez DN
Steinmetz H
Poppert H
Desvarieux M
Ikram MA
Johnsen SH
Iglseder B
Friera A
Xie W
Plichart M
Su TC
Srinivasan SR
Schmidt C
Tuomainen TP
Völzke H
Nijpels G
Willeit J
Franco OH
Suarez C
Zhao D
Ducimetiere P
Chien KL
Robertson C
Bergström G
Kauhanen J
Dörr M
Dekker JM
Kiechl S
Sitzer M
Bickel H
Sacco RL
Hofman A
Mathiesen EB
Gabriel R
Liu J
Berenson G
Kavousi M
Price JF
Source :
European journal of preventive cardiology [Eur J Prev Cardiol] 2016 Jul; Vol. 23 (11), pp. 1165-73. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Jan 08.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background: The clinical use of carotid intima media thickness (cIMT) requires normal values, which may be subject to variation of geographical factors, ethnicity or measurement details. The influence of these factors has rarely been studied. The aim of this study was to determine whether normative cIMT values and their association with event risk are generalizable across populations.<br />Design: Meta-analysis of individual participant data.<br />Method: From 22 general population cohorts from Europe, North America and Asia we selected subjects free of cardiovascular disease. Percentiles of cIMT and cIMT progression were assessed separately for every cohort. Cox proportional hazards models for vascular events were used to estimate hazard ratios for cIMT in each cohort. The estimates were pooled across Europe, North America and Asia, with random effects meta-analysis. The influence of geography, ethnicity and ultrasound protocols on cIMT values and on the hazard ratios was examined by meta-regression.<br />Results: Geographical factors, ethnicity and the ultrasound protocol had influence neither on the percentiles of cIMT and its progression, nor on the hazard ratios of cIMT for vascular events. Heterogeneity for percentiles of cIMT and cIMT progression was too large to create meaningful normative values.<br />Conclusions: The distribution of cIMT values is too heterogeneous to define universal or regional population reference values. CIMT values vary widely between different studies regardless of ethnicity, geographic location and ultrasound protocol. Prediction of vascular events with cIMT values was more consistent across all cohorts, ethnicities and regions.<br /> (© The European Society of Cardiology 2016.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2047-4881
Volume :
23
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European journal of preventive cardiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26746227
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/2047487315625543