Usefulness of cardiovascular family history data for population-based preventive medicine and medical research (The Health Family Tree Study and the NHLBI Family Heart Study)

被引:198
|
作者
Williams, RR
Hunt, SC
Heiss, G
Province, MA
Bensen, JT
Higgins, M
Chamberlain, RM
Ware, J
Hopkins, PN
机构
[1] Univ Utah, Sch Med, Cardiovasc Genet Res Clin, Salt Lake City, UT 84108 USA
[2] Univ N Carolina, Dept Epidemiol, Chapel Hill, NC USA
[3] Washington Univ, Div Biostat, St Louis, MO USA
[4] Wake Forest Univ, Bowman Gray Sch Med, Dept Publ Hlth Sci, Winston Salem, NC USA
[5] Univ Michigan, Dept Epidemiol, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
[6] Univ Texas, MD Anderson Canc Ctr, Dept Epidemiol, Houston, TX 77030 USA
[7] Utah Dept Hlth, Bureau Chron Dis Control, Salt Lake City, UT 84116 USA
来源
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY | 2001年 / 87卷 / 02期
关键词
D O I
10.1016/S0002-9149(00)01303-5
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Detailed medical family history data have been proposed to be effective in identifying high-risk families for targeted intervention. With use of a validated and standardized quantitative family risk score (FRS), the degree of familial aggregation of coronary heart disease (CHD), stroke, hypertension, and diabetes was obtained from 122,155 Utah families and 6,578 Texas families in the large, population-based Health Family Tree Study, and 1,442 families in the NHLBI Family Heart Study in Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, and Utah. Utah families with a positive family history of CHD (FRS greater than or equal to0.5) represented only 14% of the general population but accounted for 72% of persons with early CHD (men before age 55 years, women before age 65 years) and 48% of CHD at all ages. For strokes, 11% of families with FRS greater than or equal to0.5 accounted for 86% of early strokes (<75 years) and 68% of all strokes. Analyses of >5,000 families sampled each year in Utah for 14 years demonstrated a gradual decrease in the frequency of a strong positive family history of CHD (-26%/decade) and stroke (-15%/decade) that paralleled a decrease in incidence rates (r = 0.86, p <0.001 for CHD; r = 0.66, p <0.01 for stroke). Because of the collaboration of schools, health departments, and medical schools, the Health Family Tree Study proved to be a highly cost-efficient method for identifying 17,064 CHD-prone families and 13,106 stroke-prone families (at a cost of about $27 per high-risk family) in whom well-established preventive measures can be encouraged. We conclude that most early cardiovascular events in a population occur in families with a positive family history of cardiovascular disease. Family history collection is a validated and relatively inexpensive tool for family-based preventive medicine and medical research. (C) 2001 by Excerpta Medico, Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:129 / 135
页数:7
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