Systolic blood pressure strongly increased the risk of developing cardiovascular disease, with a steeper risk gradient in men (HR 1.53; 95% CI 1.33-1.75 per 20 mmHg) than in women.
Cohort
In elderly individuals, systolic blood pressure, smoking, male sex, and age are strong independent predictors of developing cardiovascular disease over a 10-year period.
Hazard Ratio: 1.53 (95% CI 1.33–1.75)
In elderly Framingham men and women, systolic blood pressure and cigarette smoking status, as well as a subject's age and sex, strongly influenced the risk of developing cardiovascular disease during ten years of follow-up. Multivariable proportional hazards models were used to assess the roles of several primary risk factors and to examine their secondary effects. The first three factors were noted in both sexes, separately and combined, but the risk function for blood pressure was steeper in men than in women (hazard ratio, HR, 1.53 per 20 mmHg, 95 per cent confidence interval, CI, 1.33 to 1.75 in men; HR = 1.19, 95 per cent CI 1.07 to 1.33 in women). Systolic pressure measured ten years earlier also contributed to CVD risk (HR = 1.16 per 20 mmHg, 95 per cent CI 1.04 to 1.30). even after accounting for current level. Smoking was associated with a 64 per cent elevation in risk, male sex with a 51 per cent increase, and each 5 years increment in age with a 22 per cent increase. Body mass index measured 10 years ago had a modest association, but current body mass index did not. Among diabetic subjects, total serum cholesterol had an asymmetrical U-shaped risk function, the risk increasing to either side of sex-specific median values; diabetes per se, however, was not significant in the final model. In non-diabetic subjects, there was little change in CVD risk up to the median cholesterol values and a modest increase thereafter. None of the risk functions was age dependent.
Martin G. Larson (Wed,) conducted a cohort in Cardiovascular disease. Systolic blood pressure (per 20 mmHg increase) was evaluated on Developing cardiovascular disease (HR 1.53, 95% CI 1.33-1.75). Systolic blood pressure strongly increased the risk of developing cardiovascular disease, with a steeper risk gradient in men (HR 1.53; 95% CI 1.33-1.75 per 20 mmHg) than in women.
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