The Malaysian Acute Vascular Events Risk (MAVERIK) study: a resource to study genetic and other determinants of first-ever myocardial infarction in Malaysia (Preprint)
Author:
Chowdhury Rajiv, Noh Mohd Fairulnizal Bin Md, Ismail Sophia Rasheeqa, van Daalen Kim Robin, Kamaruddin Puteri Sofia Nadira MegatORCID, Zulkiply Siti Hafizah, Azizul Nur Hayati, Khalid Norhayati Mustafa, Ali Azizan, Idris Izyan Mohd, Mei Yong Shih, Abdullah Shazana Rifham, Faridus Norfashihah, Yusof Nur Azirah Md, Yusoff Nur Najwa Farahin M, Jamal Abdul Rahman Abdul, Rahim Aizai Azan Abdul, Radhakrishnan Ammu Kutty, Ghapar Abdul Kahar Abdul, Fong Alan Yean Yip, Ismail Omar, Krishinan Saravanan, Yan Lee Chuey, Bang Liew Houng, Mageswaren Eashwary, Mahendran Kauthaman, Amin Nor Hanim Mohd, Muthusamy Gunavathy, Jin Aaron Ong Hean, Ramli Ahmad Wazi, Ross Noel Thomas, Ruhani Anwar Irawan, Yahya Mansor, Yusoff Yusniza, Abidin Siti Khairani Zainal, Amado Laryssa, Bolton Thomas, Weston Sophie, Crawte Jason, Ovenden Niko, Michielsen Ank, Monower Md Mostafa, Mahiyuddin Wan Rozita Wan, Wood Angela, Di Angelantonio Emanuele, Sulaiman Nur Suffia, Danesh John, Butterworth Adam S.ORCID
Abstract
UNSTRUCTURED
Introduction: Although the burden of premature myocardial infarction (MI) is high in Malaysia, direct evidence on the determinants of MI in this multi-ethnic population remains sparse. The Malaysian Acute Vascular Events Risk (MAVERIK) study is a retrospective case-control study established to enable investigation of genomic, lipid-related and other determinants of acute MI in Malaysia. To our knowledge, it represents the largest case-control study of MI and related traits in Malaysia. In this paper, we report the study’s design and initial results.
Methods: By June 2019, MAVERIK had enrolled about 2500 patients with first-ever MI and 2500 controls without cardiovascular disease (CVD), frequency-matched by age, sex and ethnicity, from 17 hospitals in Malaysia. For each participant, serum and whole blood have been collected and stored. Clinical, demographic and behavioural information has been obtained using a 200-item questionnaire.
Results: Tobacco consumption, history of diabetes, hypertension, markers of visceral adiposity, indicators of lower socioeconomic status, and family history of coronary disease were more prevalent in cases than controls. Crude and adjusted (age, sex) logistic regression models for traditional risk factors indicated that current smoking, previous smoking, history of high blood pressure, history of diabetes mellitus, family history of CHD and obesity (BMI>30) were associated with MI in age- and sex-adjusted models.
Conclusion: The MAVERIK study can serve as a useful platform to investigate genetic and other risk factors for MI in an under-studied South-East Asian population. It should help to hasten discovery of disease-causing pathways and to inform regionally appropriate strategies that optimise public health action.
Publisher
JMIR Publications Inc.
|
|