Family risk score of coronary heart disease (CHD) as a predictor of CHD: The atherosclerosis risk in communities (ARIC) study and the NHLBI family heart study
Rl. Li et al., Family risk score of coronary heart disease (CHD) as a predictor of CHD: The atherosclerosis risk in communities (ARIC) study and the NHLBI family heart study, GENET EPID, 18(3), 2000, pp. 236-250
Family history of coronary heart disease (CHD) has been found to be a risk
factor for CHD in numerous studies. Few studies have addressed whether a qu
antitative measure of family history of CHD (family risk score, FRS) predic
ts CHD in African Americans. This study assessed the association between FR
S and incident CHD of participants, and the variation of the association by
gender and race. Participants in the study were a biracial population-base
d cohort with 3,958 African Americans and 10,580 Whites aged 45-64 years ol
d in the ARIC baseline survey (1987-1989). They were randomly selected from
four U. S. communities. During follow-up (1987-1993), 352 participants exp
erienced the onset of CHD. Incidence density of CHD (per 1,000 person-years
) was 7.8 and 3.6 among African-American men (AAM) and women (AAW), and 7.2
and 2.2 among White men (WM) and women (WW). The hazard rate ratio (HRR) o
f CHD associated with one standard deviation increase of FRS was 1.52 in AA
W, 1.46 in AAM, 1.41 in WW,and 1.68 in WM. The HRRs decreased 4.6% in AAW,
1.4% in WW, 5.7% in AAM, and 3.0% in WM, but increased 2.1% in AAM after ad
justment for selected covariates. FRS predicts incident CHD in African Amer
icans and Whites, men and women. The relation of FRS to incident CHD can be
only partially explained by the selected risk factors in the biological ca
usal pathways: IMT, T-G, LDL, HDL, Lp(a), fibrinogen and hypertension. No s
ignificant difference by race has been found in this study. (C) 2000 Wiley-
Liss, Inc.