Georgousopoulou Ekavi N, Panagiotakos Demosthenes B, Pitsavos Christos, Stefanadis Christodoulos
Department of Dietetics - Nutrition, School of Health Science and Education, Harokopio University, Athens, Greece.
Department of Dietetics - Nutrition, School of Health Science and Education, Harokopio University, Athens, Greece
Eur J Prev Cardiol. 2015 Nov;22(11):1488-98. doi: 10.1177/2047487314555095. Epub 2014 Oct 14.
In past years the prediction of cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk has received special attention; however, the presented risk models have so far not been very successful or appreciated.
The aim of the present work was to examine whether the inclusion of a diet quality evaluation in a CVD risk prediction model is associated with the accuracy of estimating future events.
The working sample consisted of the 2009 ATTICA study participants (aged 18-89 years). The HellenicSCORE (a calibration of the European Society of Cardiology SCORE, based on age, gender, smoking habits, systolic blood pressure and total cholesterol) was calculated as a proxy of heart disease risk, while assessment of diet quality was based on the MedDietScore, which evaluates adherence to a Mediterranean diet. Fatal or non-fatal incidence of CVD (i.e., development of acute coronary syndromes, stroke or other CVD according to WHO-ICD-10 criteria) was calculated using the 10-year follow-up (2002-2012) data of the ATTICA study participants.
The MedDietScore and the HellenicSCORE were significant predictors of CVD events (p < 0.05). The estimating bias (i.e., misclassification rate of cases) of the model that included only the HellenicSCORE was significantly reduced by the inclusion of MedDietScore in the risk model (Harrell's C = 0.027, p = 0.012), improving the classification ability of the risk model by 56%.
The inclusion of dietary evaluation increased the accuracy of HellenicSCORE risk estimation and, thus, its incorporation into CVD risk prediction scores might help clinicians and public health professionals to better allocate future CVD candidates.
在过去几年中,心血管疾病(CVD)风险预测受到了特别关注;然而,目前所提出的风险模型至今尚未取得很大成功或受到认可。
本研究的目的是检验在CVD风险预测模型中纳入饮食质量评估是否与未来事件估计的准确性相关。
工作样本包括2009年阿提卡研究的参与者(年龄在18 - 89岁之间)。计算希腊心血管风险评分(HellenicSCORE,它是基于年龄、性别、吸烟习惯、收缩压和总胆固醇对欧洲心脏病学会SCORE进行的校准)作为心脏病风险的代理指标,而饮食质量评估基于地中海饮食评分(MedDietScore),该评分评估对地中海饮食的依从性。使用阿提卡研究参与者的10年随访(2002 - 2012年)数据计算CVD的致命或非致命发病率(即根据世界卫生组织国际疾病分类第十版标准发生的急性冠状动脉综合征、中风或其他CVD)。
地中海饮食评分(MedDietScore)和希腊心血管风险评分(HellenicSCORE)是CVD事件的显著预测指标(p < 0.05)。在风险模型中纳入MedDietScore后,仅包含HellenicSCORE的模型的估计偏差(即病例的错误分类率)显著降低(Harrell's C = 0.027,p = 0.012),风险模型的分类能力提高了56%。
纳入饮食评估提高了希腊心血管风险评分(HellenicSCORE)风险估计的准确性,因此将其纳入CVD风险预测评分可能有助于临床医生和公共卫生专业人员更好地分配未来CVD候选者。