Should your family history of coronary heart disease scare you?

Dorairaj Prabhakaran, Panniyammakal Jeemon
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引用次数: 27

Abstract

Traditional risk factors explain most of the risk associated with coronary heart disease, and after adjustment for risk factors family history was believed to contribute very little to population-attributable risk of coronary heart disease. However, the INTERHEART study demonstrated an independent association of family history of coronary heart disease with acute myocardial infarction. To assess this relationship more comprehensively in multiple datasets in different populations, we carried out a detailed review of the available evidence. Case-control studies involving 17,202 cases and 30,088 controls yielded a pooled unadjusted odds ratio (random-effects model, overall I(2) = 64.6%, P = 0.000) of 2.03 (95% confidence interval: 1.79-2.30), whereas cohort studies that included 313,837 individuals yielded an unadjusted relative risk for future coronary heart disease (random-effects model, overall I(2) = 88.7%, P = 0.000) of 1.60 (95% confidence interval: 1.44-1.77). Although the presence of family history of coronary heart disease indicates a cumulative exposure of shared genes and environment, the risk estimates for family history did not attenuate significantly after adjustment for conventional coronary heart disease risk factors in several studies. It is probably an oversimplification to dichotomize the family history variable into a simple "yes" or "no" risk factor, as the significance of family history is influenced by several variables, such as age, sex, number of relatives, and age at onset of disease in the relatives. Moreover, a quantitative risk-assessment model for the family history variable, such as the "family risk score," has a positive linear relationship with coronary heart disease. More studies are warranted to assess the benefits and risks of intensive interventions, both targeted individually and at the family level, among individuals with a valid family history and borderline elevated risk factors.

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你的冠心病家族史会吓到你吗?
传统的危险因素解释了与冠心病相关的大部分危险因素,在调整危险因素后,家族史被认为对冠心病的人群归因风险贡献很小。然而,INTERHEART研究显示冠心病家族史与急性心肌梗死之间存在独立关联。为了在不同人群的多个数据集中更全面地评估这种关系,我们对现有证据进行了详细的回顾。纳入17202例病例和30088例对照的病例对照研究得出的合并未校正比值比(随机效应模型,总体I(2) = 64.6%, P = 0.000)为2.03(95%可信区间:1.79-2.30),而纳入313837人的队列研究得出的未来冠心病的未校正相对风险(随机效应模型,总体I(2) = 88.7%, P = 0.000)为1.60(95%可信区间:1.44-1.77)。虽然冠心病家族史的存在表明共同基因和环境的累积暴露,但在一些研究中,在调整常规冠心病危险因素后,家族史的风险估计值并未显着减弱。将家族史变量分为简单的“是”或“否”风险因素可能过于简单化,因为家族史的重要性受到几个变量的影响,如年龄、性别、亲属数量和亲属发病年龄。此外,家族史变量的定量风险评估模型,如“家庭风险评分”,与冠心病呈正线性关系。需要更多的研究来评估强化干预的益处和风险,无论是针对个人还是在家庭层面,在具有有效家族史和边缘性高风险因素的个体中。
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来源期刊
Mount Sinai Journal of Medicine
Mount Sinai Journal of Medicine 医学-医学:内科
自引率
0.00%
发文量
1
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
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