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Lifetime Risk of Coronary Heart Disease in the Framingham Study

____________________________________________________________. ______________________________________________________________. Lifetime Risk of Coronary Heart Disease in the Framingham Study. Men Women. At age 40 years : 48.6% 31.7% At age 70 years : 34.9% 24.2%

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Lifetime Risk of Coronary Heart Disease in the Framingham Study

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  1. ____________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ Lifetime Risk of Coronary Heart Disease in the Framingham Study Men Women At age 40 years:48.6% 31.7% At age 70 years:34.9% 24.2% Lloyd-Jones et al. Lancet 1999; 353:89-92 _________________________________________________________________

  2. ____________________________________________________________ First Coronary Events: Framingham Study ________________________________________________________ Percent as Specified Event Myocardial Angina Sudden Infarction PectorisDeath Age Men Women Men Women Men Women 35-64 43% 28% 41% 59% 9% 4% 65-84 55% 44% 28% 41% 11% 7.4% Framingham Study 44 year follow-up. ____________________________________________________________

  3. Estimated 10-Year CHD Risk in 55-Year-Old Adults According to Levels of Various Risk Factors Framingham Heart Study A B C D Blood Pressure (mm Hg) 120/80 140/90 140/90 140/90 Total Cholesterol (mg/dL) 200 240 240 240 HDL Cholesterol (mg/dL) 50 50 40 40 Diabetes No No Yes Yes Cigarettes No No No Yes

  4. Estimated 10-Year Stroke Risk in 55-Year-Old Adults According to Levels of Various Risk Factors Framingham Heart Study A B C D E F Systolic BP* 95-105 130-148 130-148 130-148 130-148 130-148 Diabetes No No Yes Yes Yes Yes Cigarettes No No No Yes Yes Yes Prior Atrial Fib. No No No No Yes Yes Prior CVD No No No No No Yes *BP in millimeters of mercury (mmHg) Source: Stroke 1991;22:312-318.

  5. A B C D E F Systolic BP* 95-105 130-148 130-148 130-148 130-148 130-148 Diabetes No No Yes Yes Yes Yes Cigarettes No No No Yes Yes Yes Prior Atrial Fib. No No No No Yes Yes Prior CVD No No No No No Yes *BP in millimeters of mercury (mmHg) Estimated 10-year stroke risk in 55-year-old adults according to levels of various risk factors (FHS). Source: Wolf et al., Stroke.1991;22:312-318.

  6. Parental CVD <55 men, <65 Women Offspring CVD Risk by Parental CVD Status: Framingham Study Risk Ratio 2.5 2 2.2 1.5 1.7 1.7 1.7 1 1.0 1.0 0.5 0 Men Women Adjusted for: age, total/HDL Chol. ratio, SBP, smoking, diabetes, BMI

  7. Risk imposed by a strong family history of heart attacks varies widely depending on the burden of modifiable risk factors Multivariable Risk

  8. 9 Doubts about cholesterol as late as 1989

  9. 30-Year Follow-up, The Framingham Study Risk of Coronary Heart Diseaseby Serum Cholesterol Age-Adjusted Annual Rate per 1000 *Trends Significant at P.001. +P.07.

  10. Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial (MRFIT) N=325,346 Correlation Between Serum Cholesterol and CVD Mortality 30 Untreated Patients 25 55-57 years 50-54 years 20 15 6-Year CVD Death Rate Per 1000 45-49 years 10 40-44 years 35-39 years 5 0 Q1 (<182) Q2 (182-202) Q3 (203-220) Q4 (221-244) Q5 (>244) Serum Cholesterol Quintile (mg/dL) Q = serum cholesterol quintile. Kannel WB et al. Am Heart J. 1986;112:825-836.

  11. ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________ Lifetime Risk of CHD Increases with Serum Cholesterol Cholesterol 57 44 34 33 29 19 Framingham Study: Subjects age 40 years DM Lloyd-Jones et al Arch Intern Med 2003; 1966-1972

  12. Age-adjusted prevalence of Adults age 20 and older with LDL cholesterol of 130 mg/dL or higher, by race/ethnicity and sex (NHANES: 2003-2004). Source: NCHS and NHLBI. NH – non-Hispanic.

  13. Age-adjusted prevalence of Adults age 20 and older with HDL cholesterol <40 mg/dL, by race/ethnicity and sex (NHANES: 2003-2004). Source: NCHS and NHLBI. NH – non-Hispanic.

  14. Trends in mean total serum cholesterol among adults age 20 and older, by race/ethnicity, sex and survey (NHANES : 1988-94, 1999-02 and 2003-04). Source: NCHS and NHLBI. NH – non-Hispanic.

  15. Trends in mean total blood cholesterol among adolescents ages 12-17 by race, sex, and survey (NHES: 1966-70; NHANES: 1971-74 and 1988-94). Source: NCHS and NHLBI.

  16. ________________________________________________________ CK Friedberg on Hypertension: Diseases of the Heart 1996 “There is a lack of correlation in most cases between the severity and duration of hypertension and development of cardiac complications.” _______________________________________________________________

  17. 10-year Age- Adjusted Cumulative Incidence Relation of Non-Hypertensive Blood Pressure to Cardiovascular DiseaseVasan R, et al. N Engl J Med 2001; 345:1291-1297 Hazard Ratio* SBPWomenMen <120/80 1.0 1.0 120-129 1.5 1.3 130-139 2.5 1.6 H.R. adjusted for age, BMI, Cholesterol, Diabetes and smoking *P<.001 10.1 7.6 5.8 4.4 2.8 1.9 Framingham Study: Subjects Ages 35-90 yrs.

  18. Prevalence of high blood pressure in Adults by age and sex (NHANES: 1999-2004). Source: NCHS and NHLBI.

  19. Extent of awareness, treatment and control of high blood pressure by age (NHANES : 1999-2004.) Source: NCHS and NHLBI.

  20. Age-adjusted prevalence trends for high blood pressure in Adults age 20 and older by race/ethnicity, sex and survey (NHANES: 1988-94 and 1999-2004).Source: NCHS and NHLBI.

  21. Extent of Awareness, Treatment and Control of High Blood Pressure by Race/Ethnicity (NHANES: 1999-2004). Source: NCHS and NHLBI.

  22. ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ CK Friedberg on HypertensionDiseases of the Heart 1966 “Hypertension imposes a load on the heart which for many years may be compensated by left ventricular hypertrophy”

  23. ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________ CVD Risk Imposed by ECG-LVH Framingham Study 36-yr. Follow-up Age-adjusted Risk Excess Risk Rate per 1000Ratioper 1000 Age Men Women Men Women Men Women 35-64 164 135 4.7*** 7.4*** 129 117 65-94 234 235 2.8*** 4.1*** 51 178 Biennial Rate per 1000. CVD=CHD, stroke, peripheral vascular disease, heart failure ***P<0.001 _____________________________________________________________

  24. ____________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ Smoking Statement Issued in 1956 by American Heart Association “It is the belief of the committee that much greater knowledge is needed before any conclusions can be drawn concerning relationships between smoking and death rates from coronary heart disease. The acquisition of such knowledge may well require the use of techniques and research methods that have not hitherto been applied to this problem.” Circulation 1960; vol. 23 ___________________________________________________________

  25. CHD Risk by Cigarette Smoking. Filter Vs. Non-filter. Framingham Study.Men <55 Yrs. 14-yr. Rate/1000 210 206 210 119 112 59

  26. Prevalence of current smoking for Adults age 18 and older by race/ethnicity and sex (NHIS:2004). Source: MMWR. 2004;54:1121-24. NH – non-Hispanic.

  27. Prevalence of high school students in grades 9-12 reporting current cigarette smoking by race/ethnicity and sex. (YRBS:2005). Source: MMWR. 2006;55:SS-5. June 9, 2006. . NH – non-Hispanic.

  28. Diseases of The HeartCharles K Friedberg MD, WB Saunders Co. Philadelphia, 1949 ________________________________________________________________ “The proper control of diabetes is obviously desirable even though there is uncertainty as to whether coronary atherosclerosis is more frequent or severe in the uncontrolled diabetic” ______________________________________________________________

  29. __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Risk of Cardiovascular Events in DiabeticsFramingham Study Age-adjusted Biennial Rate Age-adjusted Per 1000Risk Ratio Cardiovascular EventMen WomenMen Women Coronary Disease 39 21 1.5** 2.2*** Stroke 15 6 2.9*** 2.6*** Peripheral Artery Dis. 18 18 3.4*** 6.4*** Cardiac Failure 23 21 4.4*** 7.8*** All CVD Events 76 65 2.2*** 3.7*** Subjects 35-64 36-year Follow-up **P<.001,***P<.0001 _________________________________________________________________

  30. Age-adjusted prevalence of physician-diagnosed diabetes in Adults age 18 and older by race/ethnicity and sex (NHANES: 1999-2004). Source: NCHS and NHLBI. NH – non-Hispanic.

  31. Mortality rates in U.S. adults, age 30-75, with metabolic syndrome (MetS), with and without diabetes mellitus (DM) and pre-existing CVD (NHANES II: 1976-80 Follow-up Study). ** Source: Malik et al., Circulation. 2004;110:1245-50. ** Average of 13 years of follow-up. Note: Age and gender adjusted.

  32. Keys A, Aravanis C, Blackburn H, et al. Ann Intern Med 1972; 77:15-27. Concluded that all the excess risk of coronary heart disease in the obese derives from its atherogenic accompaniments, illogically leaving the impression that obesity is therefore unimportant. Mann GV. N Engl J Med 1974; 291:226-232. “The contribution of obesity to CHD is either small or non-existent. It cannot be expected that treating obesity is either logical or a promising approach to the management of CHD”. Barrett-Connor EL. Ann Intern Med 1985; 103:1010-1019 NIH consensus panel is equivocal about the role of obesity as a cause of CHD. Skepticism About Importance of Obesity

  33. Relation of Weight Change to Changes in Atherogenic Traits: The Framingham Study Frantz Ashley, Jr. and William B Kannel J Chronic Dis 1974 “Weight gain is accompanied by atherogenic alterations in blood lipids, blood pressure, uric acid and carbohydrate tolerance.” “It seems reasonable to expect that correction of overweight will improve the coronary risk problem.” “Avoidance of overweight would seem a desirable goal in the general population if the appalling annual toll from disease is to be substantially reduced.”

  34. (1989) (1971) Risk Factor Sum and Obesity Framingham Study (1971-74) and (1989-93) 3 2.4 Risk factors accumulate with weight gain 1.8 Risk Factor Sum 1.2 0.6 0 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Overall Thin Obese Risk variables include bottom quintile for HDL-C and top quintiles for cholesterol, SBP, triglycerides and glucose

  35. Age-adjusted prevalence of obesity in Adults ages 20-74 by sex and survey (NHES, 1960-62; NHANES, 1971-74, 1976-80, 1988-94 and 2001-2004). Source: Health, United States, 2006, unpublished data. NCHS. Note: Obesity is defined as a BMI of 30.0 or higher.

  36. Trends in prevalence of overweight among U.S. children and adolescents by age and survey (NHANES, 1971-74, 1976-80, 1988-94 and 2001-2004).Source: Health, United States, 2006, unpublished data. NCHS.

  37. Prevalence of overweight among students in grades 9-12 by race/ethnicity and sex (YRBS: 2005). Source: BMI 95th percentile or higher. MMWR. 2006 55: No. SS-5. NH – non-Hispanic.

  38. Prevalence of leisure-time physical inactivity among adults age 18 and older by race/ethnicity, and sex. (BRFSS: 1994 and 2004). Source: MMWR, 2005;54:No. 39. NH – non-Hispanic.

  39. Note: “Currently recommended levels” is defined as activity that increased their heart rate and made them breathe hard some of the time for a total of at least 60 minutes/day on 5 or more of the 7 days preceding the survey. Prevalence of students in grades 9-12 who met currently recommended levels of physical activity during the past 7 days by race/ethnicity and sex (YRBS: 2005). Source: MMWR. 2006;55:No. SS-5. NH – non-Hispanic.

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