Underestimation of the importance of homocysteine as a risk factor for cardiovascular disease in epidemiological studies
Underestimation of the importance of homocysteine as a risk factor for cardiovascular disease in epidemiological studies
Background In epidemiological studies, within-person variability in plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) measurements may dilute the association of ‘usual’ levels of tHcy with risk of cardiovascular disease, referred to as ‘regression dilution'. The aim of this report was to estimate the magnitude of regression dilution after varying intervals of follow-up. Methods Regression dilution ratios (RDR) for tHcy were calculated using replicate tHcy measurements obtained after 3, 6 and 8 years from the Rotterdam, Hordaland and Framingham studies, respectively, and after 3, 6, 9 and 12 years from the United Kingdom Prospective Study of type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (UKPDS). Results The RDR for tHcy decreased with increasing interval in the three population-based studies and in the UKPDS. Moreover, the rate of decline of the RDR in the population-based studies was similar to that obtained in the UKPDS. Using linear regression analysis for the population-based studies, these results suggest an RDR of 0.83 at 2 years, 0.71 at 6 years and 0.53 at 12 years. Conclusions These results have important implications for the interpretation of prospective studies of tHcy and cardiovascular disease. Failure to correct for increasing regression dilution using lower RDRs for longer follow-up may underestimate the relative risks of cardiovascular disease associated with tHcy by about one-fifth after 2 years and one-half after 10 years.
cardiovascular disease, homocysteine, risk assessment
363-369
Clarke, R.
ff617cdc-d438-417e-9684-d91986b867fa
Lewington, S.
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Donald, A.
208832be-5f04-42fa-be52-36cacc0dc2bb
Johnston, C.
5581f9fb-f5f3-401d-ac7b-4a86b6a09446
Refsum, H.
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Stratton, I.
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Jacques, P.
b22db062-12b6-426b-bc03-7aedbb2863c5
Breteler, M.M.B.
4466cd3c-5e9e-4af4-991f-577351e3b9f2
Holman, R.
336fb2f7-edb5-4d65-a7b0-465111cbd047
1 December 2001
Clarke, R.
ff617cdc-d438-417e-9684-d91986b867fa
Lewington, S.
b47fcba0-25ce-481a-81c6-5b30ea95ae34
Donald, A.
208832be-5f04-42fa-be52-36cacc0dc2bb
Johnston, C.
5581f9fb-f5f3-401d-ac7b-4a86b6a09446
Refsum, H.
e1f3bc3c-740f-4c46-b48f-68380d1b6735
Stratton, I.
772f25b9-23c0-4240-a3f6-1e76b03b172f
Jacques, P.
b22db062-12b6-426b-bc03-7aedbb2863c5
Breteler, M.M.B.
4466cd3c-5e9e-4af4-991f-577351e3b9f2
Holman, R.
336fb2f7-edb5-4d65-a7b0-465111cbd047
Clarke, R., Lewington, S., Donald, A., Johnston, C., Refsum, H., Stratton, I., Jacques, P., Breteler, M.M.B. and Holman, R.
(2001)
Underestimation of the importance of homocysteine as a risk factor for cardiovascular disease in epidemiological studies.
European Journal of Cardiovascular Prevention & Rehabilitation, 8 (6), .
(doi:10.1177/174182670100800605).
Abstract
Background In epidemiological studies, within-person variability in plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) measurements may dilute the association of ‘usual’ levels of tHcy with risk of cardiovascular disease, referred to as ‘regression dilution'. The aim of this report was to estimate the magnitude of regression dilution after varying intervals of follow-up. Methods Regression dilution ratios (RDR) for tHcy were calculated using replicate tHcy measurements obtained after 3, 6 and 8 years from the Rotterdam, Hordaland and Framingham studies, respectively, and after 3, 6, 9 and 12 years from the United Kingdom Prospective Study of type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (UKPDS). Results The RDR for tHcy decreased with increasing interval in the three population-based studies and in the UKPDS. Moreover, the rate of decline of the RDR in the population-based studies was similar to that obtained in the UKPDS. Using linear regression analysis for the population-based studies, these results suggest an RDR of 0.83 at 2 years, 0.71 at 6 years and 0.53 at 12 years. Conclusions These results have important implications for the interpretation of prospective studies of tHcy and cardiovascular disease. Failure to correct for increasing regression dilution using lower RDRs for longer follow-up may underestimate the relative risks of cardiovascular disease associated with tHcy by about one-fifth after 2 years and one-half after 10 years.
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Accepted/In Press date: 26 September 2001
Published date: 1 December 2001
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
Sponsorship: Funding was provided by the British Heart Foundation and Medical Research Council, EU Commission (Demonstration Project Contract No BMH 4–98–3549).
Keywords:
cardiovascular disease, homocysteine, risk assessment
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 487111
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487111
ISSN: 1741-8267
PURE UUID: d142e963-bb41-4211-b0b5-ae1fa3dbfe76
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Date deposited: 14 Feb 2024 17:35
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:01
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Author:
R. Clarke
Author:
S. Lewington
Author:
A. Donald
Author:
C. Johnston
Author:
H. Refsum
Author:
I. Stratton
Author:
P. Jacques
Author:
M.M.B. Breteler
Author:
R. Holman
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