Victor Ronald G, Haley Robert W, Willett DuWayne L, Peshock Ronald M, Vaeth Patrice C, Leonard David, Basit Mujeeb, Cooper Richard S, Iannacchione Vincent G, Visscher Wendy A, Staab Jennifer M, Hobbs Helen H
Donald W. Reynolds Cardiovascular Clinical Research Center at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, Dallas, Texas 75390-8586, USA.
Am J Cardiol. 2004 Jun 15;93(12):1473-80. doi: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2004.02.058.
The decrease in cardiovascular death rates in the United States has been slower in blacks than whites, especially in patients <65 years of age. The Dallas Heart Study was designed as a single-site, multiethnic, population-based probability sample to (1) produce unbiased population estimates of biologic and social variables that pinpoint ethnic differences in cardiovascular health at the community level and (2) support hypothesis-driven research on the mechanisms causing these differences using genetics, advanced imaging modalities, social sciences, and clinical research center methods. A probability-based sample of Dallas County residents aged 18 to 65 years was surveyed with an extensive household health interview. The subset of participants 30 to 65 years of age provided in-home fasting blood and urine samples and underwent multiple imaging studies, including cardiac magnetic resonance imaging and electron beam computed tomography. Completed interviews were obtained for 6,101 subjects (54% black), phlebotomy visits for 3,398 (52% black), and clinic visits for 2,971 (50% black). Participation rates were 80.4% for interviews, 75.1% for phlebotomy visits, and 87.4% for clinic visits. Weighted population estimates of many measured variables agreed closely with those of the United States census and were relatively stable from the interview sample to the phlebotomy and clinic subsamples. Thus, the Dallas Heart Study provides a phenotypically well-characterized probability sample for multidisciplinary research that will be used to improve the mechanistic understanding and prevention of cardiovascular disease, especially in black Americans.
在美国,黑人心血管死亡率的下降速度比白人慢,尤其是在65岁以下的患者中。达拉斯心脏研究被设计为一个单中心、多民族、基于人群的概率样本,目的是:(1)对生物和社会变量进行无偏倚的人群估计,以确定社区层面心血管健康方面的种族差异;(2)利用遗传学、先进的成像技术、社会科学和临床研究中心方法,支持对导致这些差异的机制进行假设驱动的研究。对达拉斯县18至65岁的居民进行了基于概率的抽样调查,并进行了广泛的家庭健康访谈。年龄在30至65岁的参与者子集提供了家庭空腹血液和尿液样本,并接受了多项成像研究,包括心脏磁共振成像和电子束计算机断层扫描。共获得6101名受试者(54%为黑人)的完整访谈、3398名受试者(52%为黑人)的静脉穿刺样本采集以及2971名受试者(50%为黑人)的门诊就诊。访谈参与率为80.4%,静脉穿刺样本采集参与率为75.1%,门诊就诊参与率为87.4%。许多测量变量的加权人群估计值与美国人口普查的估计值非常接近,并且从访谈样本到静脉穿刺样本和门诊子样本相对稳定。因此,达拉斯心脏研究为多学科研究提供了一个表型特征良好的概率样本,将用于增进对心血管疾病机制的理解和预防,特别是在美国黑人中。