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Depression and anxiety screening improves cardiovascular risk prediction in population-based sample of 4,750 russian individuals
- Source :
- European Heart Journal. 42
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Oxford University Press (OUP), 2021.
-
Abstract
- Introduction Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) are the most serious public health problem, remaining the leading cause of death in the adult population. A great number of CVD risk scales are successfully used in clinics, yet they are tuned to work the best for patients of older age and often are population specific. Methods We used the data from a longitudinal epidemiologic study of 4,750 individuals aged 25–64 years from European part of Russia recruited in 2012–2013 to predict the 10-year risk of cardiovascular events in Russian population and evaluate performance for common clinical risk scales. The cohort was divided into two groups: “cases” – individuals with a cardiovascular event registered during the follow up period (2013–2019) as a study group (N=106) and “controls” – individuals with no cardiovascular events registered during follow up as a control group (N=4,644). All individuals with previous history of CVD (ischemic heart disease, stroke or heart attack) prior to 2012 were assigned high risk in all scales. The case and control groups were split by age: below and above 40 to reflect the properties of cardiovascular risk scales to work best for age over 40. We assessed CVD risk scores using Framingham 2008 [1], ASCVD 2013, both were calculated with mean parameters values calculated from our cohort and from the original study [2], SCORE 2003, 2017 and 2019 [3] and MOSP - the recalibrated for Russian population scale of the SCORE 2017 [4] Results For patients over 40 years old, cardiovascular risk scales showed similar performance, with ASCVD normalized to the original study's mean parameter values returning the best prediction scores. Expectedly, for the younger group of patients, cardiac risk scales do not have notable predictive power. Further, we thought to identify additional factors discriminating young individuals at higher risk of CVD. We downsampled the control cohort to include only samples with age, weight, height, LDL, total cholesterol and systolic blood pressure matching those in a case cohort ( 186 phenotypic features were tested and 4 out of top 10 (p Conclusions We identified depression and anxiety screening questionnaires as a valuable predictor for cardiovascular events in the younger population improving the quality of predictions of traditional clinical scales. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding sources: Public grant(s) – National budget only. Main funding source(s): Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation Table 1. ROC analysis
Details
- ISSN :
- 15229645 and 0195668X
- Volume :
- 42
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- European Heart Journal
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........b57fe911cddc5b54c90db562eeac5ce2
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehab724.2424