Affiliation:
1. Clinical Trial Service Unit and Epidemiological Studies Unit Nuffield Department of Population Health University of Oxford, United Kingdom
2. MRC Population Health Research Unit Nuffield Department of Population Health University of Oxford, United Kingdom
3. Department of Vascular Surgery University Medical Center Utrecht Utrecht The Netherlands
4. Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences John Radcliffe Hospital University of Oxford United Kingdom
Abstract
Background
Significant asymptomatic carotid stenosis (
ACS
) is associated with higher risk of strokes. While the prevalence of moderate and severe
ACS
is low in the general population, prediction models may allow identification of individuals at increased risk, thereby enabling targeted screening. We identified established prediction models for
ACS
and externally validated them in a large screening population.
Methods and Results
Prediction models for prevalent cases with ≥50% ACS were identified in a systematic review (975 studies reviewed and 6 prediction models identified [3 for moderate and 3 for severe
ACS
]) and then validated using data from 596 469 individuals who attended commercial vascular screening clinics in the United States and United Kingdom. We assessed discrimination and calibration. In the validation cohort, 11 178 (1.87%) participants had ≥50% ACS and 2033 (0.34%) had ≥70%
ACS
. The best model included age, sex, smoking, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes mellitus, vascular and cerebrovascular disease, measured blood pressure, and blood lipids. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve for this model was 0.75 (95%
CI,
0.74–0.75) for ≥50%
ACS
and 0.78 (95%
CI,
0.77–0.79) for ≥70%
ACS
. The prevalence of ≥50%
ACS
in the highest decile of risk was 6.51%, and 1.42% for ≥70%
ACS
. Targeted screening of the 10% highest risk identified 35% of cases with ≥50%
ACS
and 42% of cases with ≥70%
ACS
.
Conclusions
Individuals at high risk of significant
ACS
can be selected reliably using a prediction model. The best‐performing prediction models identified over one third of all cases by targeted screening of individuals in the highest decile of risk only.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
22 articles.
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