Valerio Luca, Peters Ron J, Zwinderman Aeilko H, Pinto-Sietsma Sara-Joan
Department of Public Health, University of Amsterdam Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Department of Cardiology, University of Amsterdam Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
J Am Heart Assoc. 2016 Dec 21;5(12):e004260. doi: 10.1161/JAHA.116.004260.
Hypertension alone is a poor predictor of the individual risk of cardiovascular disease. Hereditary factors of which hypertension is merely a marker may explain why some hypertensive individuals appear more susceptible to cardiovascular disease, and why some ethnicities have more often seemingly hypertension-related cardiovascular disease than others. We hypothesize that, in hypertensive individuals, a positive family history of cardiovascular disease identifies a high-risk subpopulation.
Healthy Life in Urban Settings (HELIUS) is a cohort study among participants of Dutch, South-Asian Surinamese, African Surinamese, Ghanaian, Turkish, and Moroccan origin aged 70 years and younger. In participants with hypertension (n=6467), we used logistic regression to assess the association of family history of cardiovascular disease with prevalent stroke and nonstroke cardiovascular disease, adjusting for sex, age, education, and smoking. To detect ethnic differences, we tested for interaction between family history and ethnicity and stratified the analysis by ethnicity. A positive family history was associated with a higher prevalence of nonstroke cardiovascular disease (odds ratio [OR], 2.05; 95% CI, 1.65-2.54) and stroke (OR, 1.62; 95% CI, 1.19-2.20). The strongest association of family history with nonstroke cardiovascular disease was found among the Dutch (OR, 2.47; 95% CI, 1.37-4.44) and with stroke among the African Surinamese (OR, 2.17; 95% CI, 1.32-3.57). The interaction between family history and African Surinamese origin for stroke was statistically significant.
In multiethnic populations of hypertensive patients, a positive family history of cardiovascular disease may be used clinically to identify individuals at high risk for nonstroke cardiovascular disease regardless of ethnic origin and African Surinamese individuals at high risk for stroke.
单纯高血压对个体心血管疾病风险的预测能力较差。高血压仅是其中一个标志的遗传因素,或许可以解释为何一些高血压患者似乎更易患心血管疾病,以及为何某些种族比其他种族更常出现看似与高血压相关的心血管疾病。我们推测,在高血压患者中,心血管疾病的阳性家族史可识别出高危亚人群。
城市健康生活(HELIUS)是一项针对年龄在70岁及以下的荷兰、南亚苏里南人、非洲苏里南人、加纳人、土耳其人和摩洛哥人参与者的队列研究。在高血压患者(n = 6467)中,我们使用逻辑回归评估心血管疾病家族史与中风和非中风心血管疾病患病率之间的关联,并对性别、年龄、教育程度和吸烟情况进行了校正。为检测种族差异,我们检验了家族史与种族之间的相互作用,并按种族对分析进行分层。阳性家族史与非中风心血管疾病(优势比[OR],2.05;95%置信区间[CI],1.65 - 2.54)和中风(OR,1.62;95% CI,1.19 - 2.20)的较高患病率相关。家族史与非中风心血管疾病的最强关联在荷兰人中发现(OR,2.47;95% CI,1.37 - 4.44),而与中风的最强关联在非洲苏里南人中发现(OR,2.17;95% CI,1.32 - 3.57)。家族史与非洲苏里南人起源对于中风的相互作用具有统计学意义。
在高血压患者的多民族人群中,心血管疾病的阳性家族史在临床上可用于识别非中风心血管疾病的高危个体,无论其种族出身如何,以及非洲苏里南人中中风的高危个体。