Open Access
The Lancet, volume 386, issue 9990, pages 266-273
Prognostic value of grip strength: findings from the Prospective Urban Rural Epidemiology (PURE) study
Darryl Leong
1, 2
,
Koon K. Teo
1, 2
,
Sumathy Rangarajan
3
,
P. Lopez-Jaramillo
4
,
Alvaro Avezum
5
,
Andrés Orlandini
6
,
Pamela Seron
7
,
Suad H Ahmed
8
,
Annika Rosengren
9
,
Roya Kelishadi
10
,
Omar Rahman
11
,
Sumathi Swaminathan
12
,
Romaina Iqbal
13
,
Rajeev Gupta
14
,
Scott A. Lear
15, 16, 17
,
Aytekin Oguz
18
,
Khalid Yusoff
19, 20
,
Katarzyna Zatonska
21
,
Jephat Chifamba
22
,
Ehimario U. Igumbor
23
,
V. Mohan
24
,
Ranjit Mohan Anjana
24
,
Hong-Qiu Gu
25
,
Wei Li
25
,
Salim Yusuf
1, 2
4
Fundacion Oftalmologica de Santander and Medical School, Universidad de Santander, Colombia
|
6
ECLA Foundation, Instituto Cardiovascular de Rosario, Rosario, Argentina
|
14
Fortis Escorts Hospital, Jaipur, India
|
15
Department of Biomedical Physiology and Kinesiology
17
Burnaby, BC, Canada.
|
24
Madras Diabetes Research Foundation, Chennai, India
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2015-07-01
Journal:
The Lancet
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR: 12.113
CiteScore: 148.1
Impact factor: 98.4
ISSN: 01406736, 1474547X
General Medicine
Abstract
Reduced muscular strength, as measured by grip strength, has been associated with an increased risk of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality. Grip strength is appealing as a simple, quick, and inexpensive means of stratifying an individual's risk of cardiovascular death. However, the prognostic value of grip strength with respect to the number and range of populations and confounders is unknown. The aim of this study was to assess the independent prognostic importance of grip strength measurement in socioculturally and economically diverse countries.The Prospective Urban-Rural Epidemiology (PURE) study is a large, longitudinal population study done in 17 countries of varying incomes and sociocultural settings. We enrolled an unbiased sample of households, which were eligible if at least one household member was aged 35-70 years and if household members intended to stay at that address for another 4 years. Participants were assessed for grip strength, measured using a Jamar dynamometer. During a median follow-up of 4.0 years (IQR 2.9-5.1), we assessed all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, non-cardiovascular mortality, myocardial infarction, stroke, diabetes, cancer, pneumonia, hospital admission for pneumonia or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), hospital admission for any respiratory disease (including COPD, asthma, tuberculosis, and pneumonia), injury due to fall, and fracture. Study outcomes were adjudicated using source documents by a local investigator, and a subset were adjudicated centrally.Between January, 2003, and December, 2009, a total of 142,861 participants were enrolled in the PURE study, of whom 139,691 with known vital status were included in the analysis. During a median follow-up of 4.0 years (IQR 2.9-5.1), 3379 (2%) of 139,691 participants died. After adjustment, the association between grip strength and each outcome, with the exceptions of cancer and hospital admission due to respiratory illness, was similar across country-income strata. Grip strength was inversely associated with all-cause mortality (hazard ratio per 5 kg reduction in grip strength 1.16, 95% CI 1.13-1.20; p<0.0001), cardiovascular mortality (1.17, 1.11-1.24; p<0.0001), non-cardiovascular mortality (1.17, 1.12-1.21; p<0.0001), myocardial infarction (1.07, 1.02-1.11; p=0.002), and stroke (1.09, 1.05-1.15; p<0.0001). Grip strength was a stronger predictor of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality than systolic blood pressure. We found no significant association between grip strength and incident diabetes, risk of hospital admission for pneumonia or COPD, injury from fall, or fracture. In high-income countries, the risk of cancer and grip strength were positively associated (0.916, 0.880-0.953; p<0.0001), but this association was not found in middle-income and low-income countries.This study suggests that measurement of grip strength is a simple, inexpensive risk-stratifying method for all-cause death, cardiovascular death, and cardiovascular disease. Further research is needed to identify determinants of muscular strength and to test whether improvement in strength reduces mortality and cardiovascular disease.Full funding sources listed at end of paper (see Acknowledgments).
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