Department of Clinical Biochemistry, Copenhagen University Hospital - Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Front Public Health. 2023 Jul 6;11:1200593. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.1200593. eCollection 2023.
A family history of coronary heart disease increases one's own risk of experiencing cardiovascular disease and death. An implication of the hereditary nature of the disease is that individuals are provided information about their own risk when a parent is affected, potentially leading them to engage in behaviors that reduce their own risk. In this study, we assessed how a 10-year risk of a cardiovascular event, measured by SCORE, changes for the offspring in response to a parent experiencing a myocardial infarction.
We analyzed 19,995 individuals from the general population in the Copenhagen City Heart Study of whom 2,071 had a parent, who suffered from a myocardial infarction during four decades of observation using fixed-effects regressions.
Following a parental myocardial infarction, individuals reduced their 10-year risk by 0.16 percentage points constituting a 7.1% reduction of baseline risk. Male participants had the largest change in the risk SCORE following an event of the mother, with a 12.4% reduction from the baseline risk. The degree of response contingent on their own level of risk was found to be the largest for individuals with a 10-year risk between 5% and 10%, who also showed a reduction in systolic blood pressure following paternal myocardial infarction. Parental myocardial infarction was associated with an increased smoking rate in individuals with a baseline risk above 10%, while reductions in risk were seen for individuals with a lower baseline risk.
Following a parental event, individuals reduced their 10-year risk with the largest reductions in their own risk, as observed in men and individuals experiencing a maternal event. The response was the largest for individuals with a 10-year risk for myocardial infarction between 5 and 10%.
冠心病家族史会增加个体发生心血管疾病和死亡的风险。该疾病具有遗传性,这意味着当父母一方患病时,会向个体提供有关其自身风险的信息,这可能促使他们采取降低自身风险的行为。本研究旨在评估子女在父母发生心肌梗死时,SCORE 预测的 10 年心血管事件风险会发生怎样的变化。
我们分析了来自哥本哈根城市心脏研究的 19995 名普通人群,其中 2071 人的父母在 40 年的观察期间患有心肌梗死。我们使用固定效应回归分析了这些数据。
在父母发生心肌梗死后,个体的 10 年风险降低了 0.16 个百分点,相当于基线风险降低了 7.1%。与母亲发病相比,男性参与者在母亲发病后,风险 SCORE 变化最大,基线风险降低了 12.4%。在风险水平不同的个体中,与自身风险水平相关的反应程度最大,在 10 年风险为 5%至 10%的个体中,父亲发生心肌梗死后,收缩压也降低了。与基线风险在 10%以上的个体相比,父母发生心肌梗死后,个体的吸烟率增加,而基线风险较低的个体的风险降低。
在父母发生事件后,个体降低了 10 年风险,其中男性和母亲发病的个体自身风险降低幅度最大。对于 10 年心肌梗死风险在 5%至 10%之间的个体,反应最大。