American Journal of Epidemiology Vol. 140, No. 3: 206-216
Copyright © 1994 by The Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health
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To What Extent Do Cardiovascular Risk Factor Values Measured in Elderly Men Represent Their Midlife Values Measured 25 Years Earlier? A Preliminary Report and Commentary From the Honolulu Heart Program
1Honolulu Heart Program Honolulu, HI
2Neuroclinical Trials Center, Health Sciences Center, University of Virginia Charlottesville, VA
Reprint requests to Dr Kamal Masaki, Honolulu Heart Program, Kuakini Medical Center, 347 N. Kuakini Street, Honolulu, HI 96817
In a Honolulu Heart Program cohort of 1,604 elderly men aged 7090 years who were sampled from the most recent follow-up examination (19911992), current risk factor values were compared with those obtained 25 years earlier when the same men were between ages 4564 and free of clinically diagnosed cardiovascular disease. Cardiovascular disease risk factors studied included systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, serum cholesterol, cigarette smoking, body mass index, and alcohol intake. For systolic pressure, 65% of the men had moved into a different quartile by old age, with 25% changing by more than one quartile. For diastolic pressure, 68% had moved into another quartile, with 28% moving more than one quartile, and for body mass index, 53% had moved into another quartile, with 14% moving more than a quartile Less than 1% started to smoke, while 27% were reclassified from smokers to nonsmokers Only 4% started to drink alcohol, while 30% were reclassified from drinkers to nondrinkers. When the men were stratified into cardiovascular disease, noncardiovascular disease, and healthy follow-up groups, modest deviations from the overall pattern were observed, with morbidity groups showing a greater tendency to reduction in risk factor levels. The results show that there is a substantial redistribution of major cardiovascular disease nsk factor values between midlife and old age. Since midlife values are more likely to represent lifelong exposure values that, in turn, make the main contribution to the development of atherosclerosis, investigators and clinicians may need to be cautious in using risk factor values measured late in life as the only means of assessing risk for subsequent disease. Am J Epidemiol 1994; 140:20616.
aged; cardiovascular disease; middle age; risk factors
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