Background-The absolute risk of an acute coronary event depends on the totality of risk factors exhibited by an individual, the so-called global risk profile. Although several scoring schemes have been suggested to calculate this profile, many omit information on important variables such as family history of coronary heart disease or LDL cholesterol. Methods and Results-Based on 325 acute coronary events occurring within 10 years of follow-up among 5389 men 35 to 65 years of age at recruitment into the Prospective Cardiovascular Münster (PROCAM) study, we developed a Cox proportional hazards model using the following 8 independent risk variables, ranked in order of importance: age, LDL cholesterol, smoking, HDL cholesterol, systolic blood pressure, family history of premature myocardial infarction, diabetes mellitus, and triglycerides. We then derived a simple point scoring system based on the -coefficients of this model. The accuracy of this point scoring scheme was comparable to coronary event prediction when the continuous variables themselves were used. The scoring system accurately predicted observed coronary events with an area under the receiver-operating characteristics curve of 82.4% compared with 82.9% for the Cox model with continuous variables.
Conclusions-Our
This meta-analysis of observational studies suggests that elevated homocysteine is at most a modest independent predictor of IHD and stroke risk in healthy populations. Studies of the impact on disease risk of genetic variants that affect blood homocysteine concentrations will help determine whether homocysteine is causally related to vascular disease, as may large randomized trials of the effects on IHD and stroke of vitamin supplementation to lower blood homocysteine concentrations.
Coronary thrombosis is regarded as the final occlusive event in the progress of coronary heart disease (CHD). Disturbances of the hemostatic system may favor this process and thus may indicate increased risk of myocardial infarction. Coagulation and lipid factors were measured in 2116 healthy male participants of the Prospective Cardiovascular Miinster (PROCAM) study. After 6 years of follow-up, 82 coronary events (9 sudden cardiac deaths and 14 fatal and 59 nonfatal myocardial infarctions) were observed. The mean plasma fibrinogen levels of the event and nonevent groups differed by 0.25 g/L (2.88 [SD, 0.68] versus 2.63 [SD, 0.63] g/L, respectively; P=.OO1). The incidence of coronary events in the upper tertile of the plasma fibrinogen distribution was 2.4-fold higher than in the lower tertile. By multiple logistic function analysis, plasma fibrinogen was found to be an independent risk indicator for CHD (P<.05). Individuals in the high serum low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol tertile who also showed high plasma fibrinogen concentrations had a 6.1-fold increase in coronary risk. Unexpectedly, individuals with low plasma fibrinogen had a low incidence of coronary events even when serum LDL cholesterol was high. The mean factor VIIc activities in the event and nonevent groups did not differ significantly (112.3% [SD, 19.9] and cardiac death appear to be associated with the occurrence of occlusive coronary thrombi.1 -3 One reason favoring or even precipitating thrombus formation might be a thrombogenic state in the patient's blood. Long-term epidemiological studies 410 in healthy persons report increased levels of plasma fibrinogen and factor VIIc in those individuals who develop a coronary event. This might suggest an increase in coagulation activity. To evaluate the possible role of the hemostatic system, plasma fibrinogen and factor VIIc were measured in the Prospective Cardiovascular Miinster (PROCAM) study. 1112 Since that time, plasma fibrinogen and factor VIIc have been determined in more than 10 000 persons who had not suffered from MI or stroke at the time of entry. The results from 2116 men who completed an observation period of 6 years are reported here.
Methods
Study DesignIn the PROCAM study, apparently healthy employees of Westphalian companies were examined deliberately for car- 11 The examination at onset included each patient's history, physical examination, electrocardiogram (ECG) at rest, and a laboratory blood analysis.The study began in 1979. Two years later the determination of plasma fibrinogen and factor VIIc was included, and 10 581 individuals (7540 men and 3041 women) were recruited ( Table 1). As expected, relevant numbers of MI or coronary heart disease (CHD) death occurred only in men aged 40 years and over. The analysis described below was therefore confined to the 2116 male participants between 40 and 65 years of age without a prior history of MI or stroke who had completed their 6-year follow-up.Diagnostic criteria and the definition of the end points have been p...
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