Department of Psychological Sciences, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA.
J Am Heart Assoc. 2016 Aug 29;5(9):e003741. doi: 10.1161/JAHA.116.003741.
Participant-reported health status is a key indicator of cardiovascular health, but its predictive value relative to traditional and nontraditional risk factors is unknown. We evaluated whether participant-reported health status, as indexed by self-rated health, predicted cardiovascular disease, and all-cause mortality risk excess of 10-year atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) risk scores and 5 nontraditional risk biomarkers.
Analyses used prospective observational data from the 1999-2002 National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys among those aged 40 to 79 years (N=4677). Vital status was ascertained through 2011, during which there were 850 deaths, 206 from cardiovascular disease (CVD). We regressed CVD and all-cause mortality on standardized values of self-rated health in survival models, adjusting for age, sex, education, existing chronic disease, race/ethnicity, ASCVD risk, and standardized biomarkers (fibrinogen, C-reactive protein [CRP], triglycerides, albumin, and uric acid). In sociodemographically adjusted models, a 1-SD decrease in self-rated health was associated with increased risk of CVD mortality (hazard ratio [HR], 1.92; 95% CI, 1.51-2.45; P<0.001), and this hazard remained strong after adjusting for ASCVD risk and nontraditional biomarkers (HR, 1.79; 95% CI, 1.42-2.26; P<0.001). Self-rated health also predicted all-cause mortality even after adjustment for ASCVD risk and nontraditional biomarkers (HR, 1.50; 95% CI, 1.35-1.66; P<0.001).
Self-rated health provides prognostic information beyond that captured by traditional ASCVD risk assessments and by nontraditional CVD biomarkers. Consideration of self-rated health in combination with traditional risk factors may facilitate risk assessment and clinical care.
参与者报告的健康状况是心血管健康的一个关键指标,但相对于传统和非传统危险因素,其预测价值尚不清楚。我们评估了参与者报告的健康状况(以自我评估健康状况为指标)是否可以预测心血管疾病和全因死亡率风险超过 10 年动脉粥样硬化性心血管疾病(ASCVD)风险评分和 5 种非传统心血管疾病风险生物标志物。
分析使用了 1999-2002 年国家健康和营养检查调查中年龄在 40 至 79 岁之间的前瞻性观察数据(N=4677)。通过 2011 年确定了存活情况,在此期间有 850 人死亡,其中 206 人死于心血管疾病(CVD)。我们在生存模型中根据自我评估健康的标准化值回归 CVD 和全因死亡率,调整了年龄、性别、教育程度、现有慢性疾病、种族/民族、ASCVD 风险和标准化生物标志物(纤维蛋白原、C 反应蛋白[CRP]、甘油三酯、白蛋白和尿酸)。在社会人口统计学调整模型中,自我评估健康状况每降低 1 个标准差,CVD 死亡率的风险就会增加(风险比[HR],1.92;95%置信区间[CI],1.51-2.45;P<0.001),并且在调整 ASCVD 风险和非传统生物标志物后,这种风险仍然很强(HR,1.79;95%CI,1.42-2.26;P<0.001)。即使在调整 ASCVD 风险和非传统生物标志物后,自我评估健康状况也能预测全因死亡率(HR,1.50;95%CI,1.35-1.66;P<0.001)。
自我评估健康状况提供了比传统 ASCVD 风险评估和非传统心血管疾病生物标志物更具预后意义的信息。考虑自我评估健康状况与传统危险因素相结合可能有助于风险评估和临床护理。