Lloyd-Jones Donald M, Leip Eric P, Larson Martin G, Vasan Ramachandran S, Levy Daniel
Department of Preventive Medicine, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, 680 N Lake Shore Dr, Suite 1120, Chicago, IL 60611, USA.
Hypertension. 2005 Jan;45(1):39-45. doi: 10.1161/01.HYP.0000149106.89470.13. Epub 2004 Nov 15.
Hypertension confers risk for multiple types of cardiovascular events, but competing risks for these outcomes are unknown. We estimated the competing risks over 12 years after hypertension onset among cases and age-, sex-, and examination-matched controls using competing Cox cumulative incidence and proportional hazards models. We included all Framingham Heart Study subjects examined after 1977 with new-onset hypertension who were free of cardiovascular disease. There were 645 men and 702 women with new-onset hypertension (mean age: men, 55+/-12 years; women, 59+/-12 years). Compared with matched nonhypertensive controls, subjects with new-onset hypertension were more likely to experience a cardiovascular event first rather than noncardiovascular death. Among new-onset hypertensives, the 12-year competing cumulative incidence of any cardiovascular end point as a first event in men was 24.7%, compared with 9.8% for noncardiovascular death (hazards ratio [HR], 2.53; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.83 to 3.50); in women, the competing incidences were 16.0% versus 10.1%, respectively (HR, 1.58; 95% CI, 1.13 to 2.20). The most common first major cardiovascular events were hard coronary disease (8.2%) in men and stroke (5.2%) in women. Type and incidence of first cardiovascular events varied by age and severity of hypertension at onset, with stroke predominating among older subjects with new-onset hypertension. After hypertension onset, cardiovascular events are more likely to occur first as opposed to noncardiovascular death. Types of initial events differ by gender, age, and severity of hypertension at onset. These results represent a novel approach to understanding the complications of hypertension and may help target therapies for patients with new-onset hypertension to optimize prevention strategies.
高血压会增加多种心血管事件的风险,但这些结果的竞争风险尚不清楚。我们使用竞争Cox累积发病率和比例风险模型,估计了高血压发病后12年中病例组以及年龄、性别和检查匹配的对照组中的竞争风险。我们纳入了1977年后接受检查的所有无心血管疾病的新发性高血压弗雷明汉心脏研究受试者。有645名男性和702名女性新发高血压(平均年龄:男性55±12岁;女性59±12岁)。与匹配的非高血压对照组相比,新发高血压受试者更有可能首先发生心血管事件而非非心血管死亡。在新发高血压患者中,男性作为首个事件的任何心血管终点的12年竞争累积发病率为24.7%,而非心血管死亡为9.8%(风险比[HR],2.53;95%置信区间[CI],1.83至3.50);在女性中,竞争发病率分别为16.0%和10.1%(HR,1.58;95%CI,1.13至2.20)。最常见的首个主要心血管事件在男性中是硬性冠心病(8.2%),在女性中是中风(5.2%)。首个心血管事件的类型和发病率因发病时高血压的年龄和严重程度而异,中风在新发高血压的老年受试者中占主导。高血压发病后,心血管事件比非心血管死亡更有可能首先发生。初始事件的类型因性别、年龄和发病时高血压的严重程度而异。这些结果代表了一种理解高血压并发症的新方法,可能有助于针对新发高血压患者制定治疗方案,以优化预防策略。