Affiliation:
1. Cardiovascular Epidemiology Unit, Institute of Cardiovascular Research, University of Dundee, United Kingdom
2. The George Institute for Global Health, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
3. The George Institute for Global Health, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia
4. Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD
5. Division of Molecular and Clinical Medicine, University of Dundee, United Kingdom
6. Vascular Medicine, Institute of Cardiovascular Research, University of Dundee, United Kingdom
Abstract
Background
Coronary heart disease and peripheral arterial disease (
PAD
) affect different vascular territories. Supplementing baseline findings with assays from stored serum, we compared their 20‐year predictors.
Methods and Results
We randomly recruited 15 737 disease‐free men and women aged 30 to 75 years across Scotland between 1984 and 1995 and followed them through 2009 for death and hospital diagnoses. Of these, 3098 developed coronary heart disease (19.7%), and 499
PAD
(3.2%). Hazard ratios for 45 variables in the Cox model were adjusted for age and sex and for factors in the 2007
ASSIGN
cardiovascular risk score. Forty‐four of them were entered into parsimonious predictive models, tested by c‐statistics and net reclassification improvements. Many hazard ratios diminished with adjustment and parsimonious modeling, leaving significant survivors. The hazard ratios were mostly higher in
PAD
. New parsimonious models increased the c‐statistic and net reclassification improvements over
ASSIGN
variables alone but varied in their components and ranking. Coronary heart disease and
PAD
shared 7 of the 9 factors from
ASSIGN
: age, sex, family history, socioeconomic status, diabetes mellitus, tobacco smoking, and systolic blood pressure (but neither total nor high‐density lipoprotein cholesterol); plus 4 new ones:
NT
‐pro‐
BNP
, cotinine, high‐sensitivity C‐reactive protein, and cystatin‐C. The highest ranked hazard ratios for continuous factors in coronary heart disease were those for age, total cholesterol, high‐sensitivity troponin,
NT
‐pro‐
BNP
, cotinine, apolipoprotein A, and waist circumference (plus 10 more); in
PAD
they were age, high‐sensitivity C‐reactive protein, systolic blood pressure, expired carbon monoxide, cotinine, socioeconomic status, and lipoprotein (a) (plus 5 more).
Conclusions
The mixture of shared with disparate determinants for arterial disease in the heart and the legs implies nonidentical pathogenesis: cholesterol dominant in the former, and inflammation (high‐sensitivity C‐reactive protein, diabetes mellitus, smoking) in the latter.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
68 articles.
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