Assessing cardiovascular disease risk and social determinants of health: A comparative analysis of five risk estimation instruments using data from the Eastern Caribbean Health Outcomes Research Network.

IF 2.6 3区 综合性期刊 Q1 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES PLoS ONE Pub Date : 2025-01-24 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0316577
Jeremy I Schwartz, Christina Howitt, Sumitha Raman, Sanya Nair, Saria Hassan, Carol Oladele, Ian R Hambleton, Daniel F Sarpong, Oswald P Adams, Rohan G Maharaj, Cruz M Nazario, Maxine Nunez, Marcella Nunez-Smith
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Abstract

Background: Accurate assessment of cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk is crucial for effective prevention and resource allocation. However, few CVD risk estimation tools consider social determinants of health (SDoH), despite their known impact on CVD risk. We aimed to estimate 10-year CVD risk in the Eastern Caribbean Health Outcomes Research Network Cohort Study (ECS) across multiple risk estimation instruments and assess the association between SDoH and CVD risk.

Methods: Five widely used CVD risk estimation tools (Framingham and WHO laboratory, both laboratory and non-laboratory-based, and ASCVD) were applied using data from ECS participants aged 40-74 without a history of CVD. SDoH variables included educational attainment, occupational status, household food security, and perceived social status. Multivariable logistic regression models were used to compare differences in the association between selected SDoH and high CVD risk according to the five instruments.

Findings: Among 1,777 adult participants, estimated 10-year CVD risk varied substantially across tools. Framingham non-lab and ASCVD demonstrated strong agreement in categorizing participants as high risk. Framingham non-lab categorized the greatest percentage as high risk, followed by Framingham lab, ASCVD, WHO lab, and WHO non-lab. Fifteen times more people were classified as high risk by Framingham non-lab compared with WHO non-lab (31% vs 2%). Mean estimated 10-year risk in the sample was over 2.5 times higher using Framingham non-lab vs WHO non-lab (17.3% vs 6.6%). We found associations between food insecurity, those with the lowest level compared to the highest level of education, and non-professional occupation and increased estimated CVD risk.

Interpretation: Our findings highlight significant discrepancies in CVD risk estimation across tools and underscore the potential impact of incorporating SDoH into risk assessment. Further research is needed to validate and refine existing risk tools, particularly in ethnically diverse populations and resource-constrained settings, and to develop race- and ethnicity-free risk estimation models that consider SDoH.

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评估心血管疾病风险和健康的社会决定因素:利用东加勒比健康成果研究网络的数据对五种风险估计工具进行比较分析。
背景:准确评估心血管疾病(CVD)风险对有效预防和资源配置至关重要。然而,很少有心血管疾病风险评估工具考虑健康的社会决定因素(SDoH),尽管它们对心血管疾病风险有已知的影响。我们的目的是在东加勒比健康结果研究网络队列研究(ECS)中通过多种风险评估工具估计10年心血管疾病风险,并评估SDoH和心血管疾病风险之间的关系。方法:采用五种广泛使用的CVD风险评估工具(Framingham和WHO实验室,实验室和非实验室,以及ASCVD),使用年龄在40-74岁之间无CVD病史的ECS参与者的数据。SDoH变量包括受教育程度、职业状况、家庭粮食保障和感知社会地位。采用多变量logistic回归模型比较五种工具所选择的SDoH与高CVD风险之间的相关性差异。研究结果:在1777名成年参与者中,不同工具的10年心血管疾病风险估计值差异很大。Framingham非实验室和ASCVD在将参与者分类为高风险方面表现出强烈的一致性。弗雷明汉非实验室将最高比例归为高风险,其次是弗雷明汉实验室、ASCVD、世卫组织实验室和世卫组织非实验室。被Framingham非实验室列为高危人群的人数是世卫组织非实验室的15倍(31%比2%)。使用Framingham非实验室与WHO非实验室,样本的平均估计10年风险高出2.5倍以上(17.3%对6.6%)。我们发现食物不安全、受教育程度最低的人与受教育程度最高的人、非专业职业与心血管疾病估计风险增加之间存在关联。解释:我们的研究结果强调了不同工具在心血管疾病风险评估中的显著差异,并强调了将SDoH纳入风险评估的潜在影响。需要进一步的研究来验证和完善现有的风险工具,特别是在种族多样化的人群和资源受限的环境中,并开发考虑SDoH的种族和非种族风险估计模型。
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来源期刊
PLoS ONE
PLoS ONE 生物-生物学
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
5.40%
发文量
14242
审稿时长
3.7 months
期刊介绍: PLOS ONE is an international, peer-reviewed, open-access, online publication. PLOS ONE welcomes reports on primary research from any scientific discipline. It provides: * Open-access—freely accessible online, authors retain copyright * Fast publication times * Peer review by expert, practicing researchers * Post-publication tools to indicate quality and impact * Community-based dialogue on articles * Worldwide media coverage
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