Aims To evaluate the clinical utility of cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk stratification based on a combined use of short-term and long-term risk scores in the primary prevention setting. Methods CVD-free participants 40-65 years old initially to seven population-based cohorts enrolled in northern and central Italy were stratified as 'low' (ESC-SCORE<-1%), 'intermediate' (SCORE 1-4%) and 'moderate/high' shortterm CVD risk (SCORE >-4% or diabetes). The long-term CVD risk was estimated using the CAMUNI-MATISS model, validated for the Italian population. Participants were followed up for a median time of 16 years to ascertain the first major CVD event, fatal or nonfatal. To compare the 'combined' (SCORE R CAMUNI-MATISS) with the 'current' (SCORE alone) stratification, we estimated the difference in Net Benefit between the two strategies. Results Study sample included 3935 men (468 CVD events) and 4393 women (210 events). Under the 'current' stratification, 76% of men and 21% of women were at 'intermediate' risk and eligible to treatment. Only 40% of them had elevated predicted long-term risk and could have received indication to treatment under the 'combined' strategy. The latter would have saved 3 and 3.5 unnecessary treatments per every CVD case in men and women, respectively, and the Net Benefit significantly increased [men: 4.1, 95% confidence interval (CI): 2.7-5.6; women: 4.4, 95% CI: 1.7-6.9]. Similarly, among the 74% of women not receiving indication for prevention because at 'low' short-term risk, the 'combined' stratification significantly increased the Net Benefit (1.4, 95% CI: 0.6-2.1) and reduced from 40 to 10% the proportion of events occurring among women not eligible to any preventive action. Conclusion In the Italian population, a combination of validated short-term and long-term CVD risk scores has the potential to select for prevention women whose risk is currently not fully addressed and to reduce unnecessary costly treatment.

Veronesi, G., Giampaoli, S., Vanuzzo, D., Gianfagna, F., Palmieri, L., Grassi, G., et al. (2017). Combined use of short-term and long-term cardiovascular risk scores in primary prevention: An assessment of clinical utility. JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR MEDICINE, 18(5), 318-324 [10.2459/JCM.0000000000000509].

Combined use of short-term and long-term cardiovascular risk scores in primary prevention: An assessment of clinical utility

Grassi G.;Cesana G.;
2017

Abstract

Aims To evaluate the clinical utility of cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk stratification based on a combined use of short-term and long-term risk scores in the primary prevention setting. Methods CVD-free participants 40-65 years old initially to seven population-based cohorts enrolled in northern and central Italy were stratified as 'low' (ESC-SCORE<-1%), 'intermediate' (SCORE 1-4%) and 'moderate/high' shortterm CVD risk (SCORE >-4% or diabetes). The long-term CVD risk was estimated using the CAMUNI-MATISS model, validated for the Italian population. Participants were followed up for a median time of 16 years to ascertain the first major CVD event, fatal or nonfatal. To compare the 'combined' (SCORE R CAMUNI-MATISS) with the 'current' (SCORE alone) stratification, we estimated the difference in Net Benefit between the two strategies. Results Study sample included 3935 men (468 CVD events) and 4393 women (210 events). Under the 'current' stratification, 76% of men and 21% of women were at 'intermediate' risk and eligible to treatment. Only 40% of them had elevated predicted long-term risk and could have received indication to treatment under the 'combined' strategy. The latter would have saved 3 and 3.5 unnecessary treatments per every CVD case in men and women, respectively, and the Net Benefit significantly increased [men: 4.1, 95% confidence interval (CI): 2.7-5.6; women: 4.4, 95% CI: 1.7-6.9]. Similarly, among the 74% of women not receiving indication for prevention because at 'low' short-term risk, the 'combined' stratification significantly increased the Net Benefit (1.4, 95% CI: 0.6-2.1) and reduced from 40 to 10% the proportion of events occurring among women not eligible to any preventive action. Conclusion In the Italian population, a combination of validated short-term and long-term CVD risk scores has the potential to select for prevention women whose risk is currently not fully addressed and to reduce unnecessary costly treatment.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
CAMUNI-MATISS, Cardiovascular disease, Clinical utility, Italy, Risk stratification
English
2017
18
5
318
324
none
Veronesi, G., Giampaoli, S., Vanuzzo, D., Gianfagna, F., Palmieri, L., Grassi, G., et al. (2017). Combined use of short-term and long-term cardiovascular risk scores in primary prevention: An assessment of clinical utility. JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR MEDICINE, 18(5), 318-324 [10.2459/JCM.0000000000000509].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/281364
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