Validity of an adaptation of the Framingham cardiovascular risk function: the VERIFICA study

Jaume Marrugat(Municipal Institute for Medical Research), Isaac Subirana, Eva Comín(Institut Català de la Salut), Carmen Cabezas(Institut Català de la Salut), Joan Vila, Roberto Elosúa, Byung Ho Nam(Boston University), Rafel Ramos, Joan Sala, Pascual Solanas(Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona), Ferran Cordón(Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona), Joan Gené Badía(Consorci d’Atenció Primària de Salut Barcelona Esquerra), Ralph B. D’Agostino(Boston University)
Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health
December 20, 2006
Cited by 322Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: To assess the reliability and accuracy of the Framingham coronary heart disease (CHD) risk function adapted by the Registre Gironí del Cor (REGICOR) investigators in Spain. METHODS: A 5-year follow-up study was completed in 5732 participants aged 35-74 years. The adaptation consisted of using in the function the average population risk factor prevalence and the cumulative incidence observed in Spain instead of those from Framingham in a Cox proportional hazards model. Reliability and accuracy in estimating the observed cumulative incidence were tested with the area under the curve comparison and goodness-of-fit test, respectively. RESULTS: The Kaplan-Meier CHD cumulative incidence during the follow-up was 4.0% in men and 1.7% in women. The original Framingham function and the REGICOR adapted estimates were 10.4% and 4.8%, and 3.6% and 2.0%, respectively. The REGICOR-adapted function's estimate did not differ from the observed cumulated incidence (goodness of fit in men, p = 0.078, in women, p = 0.256), whereas all the original Framingham function estimates differed significantly (p<0.001). Reliabilities of the original Framingham function and of the best Cox model fit with the study data were similar in men (area under the receiver operator characteristic curve 0.68 and 0.69, respectively, p = 0.273), whereas the best Cox model fitted better in women (0.73 and 0.81, respectively, p<0.001). CONCLUSION: The Framingham function adapted to local population characteristics accurately and reliably predicted the 5-year CHD risk for patients aged 35-74 years, in contrast with the original function, which consistently overestimated the actual risk.


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