New England Journal of Medicine, volume 371, issue 9, pages 818-827
Cardiovascular Risk and Events in 17 Low-, Middle-, and High-Income Countries
Salim Yusuf
1
,
Sumathy Rangarajan
1
,
Koon K. Teo
1
,
Shofiqul Islam
1
,
Wei Li
2
,
Lisheng Liu
2
,
Jian Bo
2
,
Qinglin Lou
3
,
Fanghong Lu
4
,
Tianlu Liu
5
,
Liu Yu
6
,
SHIYING ZHANG
7
,
Prem Mony
8
,
Sumathi Swaminathan
8
,
V. Mohan
9
,
Rajeev Gupta
10
,
Rajesh Kumar
11
,
Krishnapillai Vijayakumar
12
,
Scott A. Lear
13
,
Sonia S. Anand
1
,
A.T. Wielgosz
14, 15
,
Rafael Diaz
16
,
Alvaro Avezum
17
,
P. Lopez-Jaramillo
18
,
F. Lanas
19
,
Khalid Yusoff
20
,
Noorhassim Ismail
21
,
Romaina Iqbal
22
,
Omar Rahman
23
,
Annika Rosengren
24
,
Iolanthè M. Kruger
25
,
Roya Kelishadi
26
,
Annamarie Kruger
27
,
Thandi Puoane
28
,
Andrzej Szuba
29
,
Jephat Chifamba
30
,
Aytekin Oguz
31
,
Matthew McQueen
1
,
Martin McKee
32
,
G. R. Dagenais
33
3
Jiangsu Province Institute of Geriatrics
4
Shandong Province Academy of Medical Science
5
Xi'an Electronic Technology University Hospital
6
Shenyang City 242 Hospital
|
7
Bayannaoer Center for Disease Control and Prevention
8
Division of Epidemiology and Population Health, St. John's Research Institute
9
Madras Diabetes Research Foundation
10
Fortis Escorts Hospitals, JLN Marg
12
Health Action by People
13
Department of Biomedical Physiology and Kinesiology, Simon Fraser University.
|
14
DEPARTMENT OF MEDICINE
16
Estudios Clinicos Latinoamerica ECLA
17
Dante Pazzanese Institute of Cardiology
18
Fundacion Oftalmologica de Santander (FOSCAL), Medical School, Universidad de Santander
|
21
Department of Community Health
33
Laval University, Heart and Lungs Institute
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2014-08-27
Journal:
New England Journal of Medicine
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR: 20.544
CiteScore: 145.4
Impact factor: 96.2
ISSN: 00284793, 15334406
General Medicine
Abstract
More than 80% of deaths from cardiovascular disease are estimated to occur in low-income and middle-income countries, but the reasons are unknown.We enrolled 156,424 persons from 628 urban and rural communities in 17 countries (3 high-income, 10 middle-income, and 4 low-income countries) and assessed their cardiovascular risk using the INTERHEART Risk Score, a validated score for quantifying risk-factor burden without the use of laboratory testing (with higher scores indicating greater risk-factor burden). Participants were followed for incident cardiovascular disease and death for a mean of 4.1 years.The mean INTERHEART Risk Score was highest in high-income countries, intermediate in middle-income countries, and lowest in low-income countries (P<0.001). However, the rates of major cardiovascular events (death from cardiovascular causes, myocardial infarction, stroke, or heart failure) were lower in high-income countries than in middle- and low-income countries (3.99 events per 1000 person-years vs. 5.38 and 6.43 events per 1000 person-years, respectively; P<0.001). Case fatality rates were also lowest in high-income countries (6.5%, 15.9%, and 17.3% in high-, middle-, and low-income countries, respectively; P=0.01). Urban communities had a higher risk-factor burden than rural communities but lower rates of cardiovascular events (4.83 vs. 6.25 events per 1000 person-years, P<0.001) and case fatality rates (13.52% vs. 17.25%, P<0.001). The use of preventive medications and revascularization procedures was significantly more common in high-income countries than in middle- or low-income countries (P<0.001).Although the risk-factor burden was lowest in low-income countries, the rates of major cardiovascular disease and death were substantially higher in low-income countries than in high-income countries. The high burden of risk factors in high-income countries may have been mitigated by better control of risk factors and more frequent use of proven pharmacologic therapies and revascularization. (Funded by the Population Health Research Institute and others.).
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