J. Pekkanen et al., DOES THE PREDICTIVE VALUE OF BASE-LINE CORONARY RISK-FACTORS CHANGE OVER A 30-YEAR FOLLOW-UP, Cardiology, 82(2-3), 1993, pp. 181-190
The association of baseline serum total cholesterol, systolic blood pr
essure, smoking and body mass index with coronary heart disease (CHD)
mortality was analyzed among 1,619 men aged 40-59 at baseline. Analyse
s were made separately for the first, second and third decade of follo
w-up. Serum cholesterol and smoking more than 9 cigarettes daily were
strong predictors of risk of CHD death (n = 450) occurring early and l
ate during the 30-year follow-up. After 20 years of follow-up, systoli
c blood pressure was no longer associated with CHD risk. In contrast,
highest tertile of body mass index (over 24.7 kg/M2) was only then ass
ociated with increased CHD risk. The correlations between the baseline
and the 30-year risk factor values were 0.42 for serum cholesterol (n
= 444), 0.28 for systolic blood pressure (n = 444) and 0.57 for body
mass index (n = 429). Our results showed large differences in the long
-term predictive power of the classical coronary risk factors. The rea
sons for these differences are discussed.