Determinants of 40-year all-cause mortality in the European cohorts of the Seven Countries Study

If a few risk factors had predictive power for all-cause mortality in different geographical-cultural areas, then preventive efforts might be concentrated on these.Thirteen potential risk factors were measured in 6,554 men aged 40-59 around 1960 in Northern, Southern and Eastern European areas of th...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of epidemiology 2011-08, Vol.26 (8), p.595-608
Hauptverfasser: Puddu, Paolo Emilio, Menotti, Alessandro, Tolonen, Hanna, Nedeljkovic, Srecko, Kafatos, Anthony George
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container_issue 8
container_start_page 595
container_title European journal of epidemiology
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creator Puddu, Paolo Emilio
Menotti, Alessandro
Tolonen, Hanna
Nedeljkovic, Srecko
Kafatos, Anthony George
description If a few risk factors had predictive power for all-cause mortality in different geographical-cultural areas, then preventive efforts might be concentrated on these.Thirteen potential risk factors were measured in 6,554 men aged 40-59 around 1960 in Northern, Southern and Eastern European areas of the Seven Countries Study. In 40 years 85.3% of men died in the pooled areas (87.9, 81.8 and 87.9% in Northern, Southern and Eastern Europe, respectively).Six risk factors were significant predictors of events in all three areas: directly for age, smoking habits, mean blood pressure, heart rate and ECG abnormalities; inversely for forced expiratory volume. In a pooled model also father and mother life status, socio-economic status, and arm circumference (the last one in an inverse way) had significant coefficients that were not heterogeneous across areas (except for socio-economic status). Serum cholesterol was around significance. ROC curves had values of 0.833, 0.806 and 0.819 respectively in Northern, Southern and Eastern Europe, and 0.827 in the pooled areas. Correlation coefficients between observed and expected cases in deciles of estimated risk were between 0.98 and 0.99. Survivors after 40 years in the lower half of the estimated risk were 10.7, 23.6 and 13.3% in Northern, Southern and Eastern Europe, respectively. Under-or over-estimate of cross-applying risk functions did not exceed 15%. Allcause mortality and survival in middle aged men during 40 years were strongly associated with a few, mainly cardiovascular, risk factors, whose predictive power was similar in different cultures across Europe.
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Survivors after 40 years in the lower half of the estimated risk were 10.7, 23.6 and 13.3% in Northern, Southern and Eastern Europe, respectively. Under-or over-estimate of cross-applying risk functions did not exceed 15%. 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In 40 years 85.3% of men died in the pooled areas (87.9, 81.8 and 87.9% in Northern, Southern and Eastern Europe, respectively).Six risk factors were significant predictors of events in all three areas: directly for age, smoking habits, mean blood pressure, heart rate and ECG abnormalities; inversely for forced expiratory volume. In a pooled model also father and mother life status, socio-economic status, and arm circumference (the last one in an inverse way) had significant coefficients that were not heterogeneous across areas (except for socio-economic status). Serum cholesterol was around significance. ROC curves had values of 0.833, 0.806 and 0.819 respectively in Northern, Southern and Eastern Europe, and 0.827 in the pooled areas. Correlation coefficients between observed and expected cases in deciles of estimated risk were between 0.98 and 0.99. Survivors after 40 years in the lower half of the estimated risk were 10.7, 23.6 and 13.3% in Northern, Southern and Eastern Europe, respectively. Under-or over-estimate of cross-applying risk functions did not exceed 15%. 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Survivors after 40 years in the lower half of the estimated risk were 10.7, 23.6 and 13.3% in Northern, Southern and Eastern Europe, respectively. Under-or over-estimate of cross-applying risk functions did not exceed 15%. Allcause mortality and survival in middle aged men during 40 years were strongly associated with a few, mainly cardiovascular, risk factors, whose predictive power was similar in different cultures across Europe.</abstract><cop>Dordrecht</cop><pub>Springer</pub><pmid>21713523</pmid><doi>10.1007/s10654-011-9600-7</doi><tpages>14</tpages></addata></record>
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source MEDLINE; Jstor Complete Legacy; Springer Nature - Complete Springer Journals
subjects Adult
Age Factors
Biological and medical sciences
Blood pressure
Body Mass Index
Cardiology
Cause of Death - trends
Cholesterol - blood
Correlation coefficient
Cross-Cultural Comparison
Economics
Electrocardiography
Epidemiology
Europe - epidemiology
Exercise
Follow-Up Studies
Forced Expiratory Volume
General aspects
Heart - physiology
Heart - physiopathology
Heart rate
Humans
Infectious Diseases
Male
Medical sciences
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Middle Aged
Miscellaneous
Mortality
Motor Activity
Oncology
Parents
Predisposing factors
Public Health
Public health. Hygiene
Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
Risk Factors
ROC Curve
Serum cholesterol
Smoking
Social Class
Socioeconomics
title Determinants of 40-year all-cause mortality in the European cohorts of the Seven Countries Study
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