Tielemans Susanne M A J, Geleijnse Johanna M, Menotti Alessandro, Boshuizen Hendriek C, Soedamah-Muthu Sabita S, Jacobs David R, Blackburn Henry, Kromhout Daan
Division of Human Nutrition, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands (S.J.T., J.M.G., H.C.B., S.S.S.M., D.K.).
Association for Cardiac Research, Rome, Italy (A.M.).
J Am Heart Assoc. 2015 Mar 9;4(3):e001378. doi: 10.1161/JAHA.114.001378.
Blood pressure (BP) trajectories derived from measurements repeated over years have low measurement error and may improve cardiovascular disease prediction compared to single, average, and usual BP (single BP adjusted for regression dilution). We characterized 10-year BP trajectories and examined their association with cardiovascular mortality, all-cause mortality, and life years lost.
Data from 2 prospective and nearly extinct cohorts of middle-aged men—the Minnesota Business and Professional Men Study (n=261) and the Zutphen Study (n=632)—were used. BP was measured annually during 1947-1957 in Minnesota and 1960-1970 in Zutphen. BP trajectories were identified by latent mixture modeling. Cox proportional hazards and linear regression models examined BP trajectories with cardiovascular mortality, all-cause mortality, and life years lost. Associations were adjusted for age, serum cholesterol, smoking, and diabetes mellitus. Mean initial age was about 50 years in both cohorts. After 10 years of BP measurements, men were followed until death on average 20 years later. All Minnesota men and 98% of Zutphen men died. Four BP trajectories were identified, in which mean systolic BP increased by 5 to 49 mm Hg in Minnesota and 5 to 20 mm Hg in Zutphen between age 50 and 60. The third systolic BP trajectories were associated with 2 to 4 times higher cardiovascular mortality risk, 2 times higher all-cause mortality risk, and 4 to 8 life years lost, compared to the first trajectory.
Ten-year BP trajectories were the strongest predictors, among different BP measures, of cardiovascular mortality, all-cause mortality, and life years lost in Minnesota. However, average BP was the strongest predictor in Zutphen.
多年重复测量得出的血压轨迹测量误差低,与单次、平均及常规血压(经回归稀释调整的单次血压)相比,可能改善心血管疾病预测。我们对10年血压轨迹进行了特征描述,并研究了其与心血管死亡率、全因死亡率及生命年损失的关联。
使用了来自两个中年男性前瞻性且几乎灭绝的队列的数据——明尼苏达商业和职业男性研究(n = 261)以及祖特芬研究(n = 632)。血压于1947 - 1957年在明尼苏达每年测量一次,1960 - 1970年在祖特芬每年测量一次。通过潜在混合模型确定血压轨迹。Cox比例风险模型和线性回归模型研究了血压轨迹与心血管死亡率、全因死亡率及生命年损失的关系。关联因素调整了年龄、血清胆固醇、吸烟和糖尿病。两个队列的平均初始年龄约为50岁。经过10年的血压测量后,男性平均在20年后被随访至死亡。所有明尼苏达男性和98%的祖特芬男性死亡。确定了四条血压轨迹,其中在50至60岁之间,明尼苏达的平均收缩压升高了5至49毫米汞柱,祖特芬的平均收缩压升高了5至20毫米汞柱。与第一条轨迹相比,第三条收缩压轨迹的心血管死亡风险高2至4倍,全因死亡风险高2倍,生命年损失4至8年。
在明尼苏达,10年血压轨迹是不同血压测量指标中预测心血管死亡率、全因死亡率及生命年损失的最强指标。然而,在祖特芬,平均血压是最强的预测指标。