Journal
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL HYPERTENSION
Volume 20, Issue 5, Pages 880-890Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jch.13270
Keywords
derivation; eating rate; hypertension; prediction model; uric acid; validation
Categories
Funding
- Prevention for Lifestyle Disease from the Japan Health Promotion Foundation
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No integrated risk assessment tools that include lifestyle factors and uric acid have been developed. In accordance with the Industrial Safety and Health Law in Japan, a follow-up examination of 63495 normotensive individuals (mean age 42.8years) who underwent a health checkup in 2010 was conducted every year for 5years. The primary endpoint was new-onset hypertension (systolic blood pressure [SBP]/diastolic blood pressure [DBP] 140/90mm Hg and/or the initiation of antihypertensive medications with self-reported hypertension). During the mean 3.4 years of follow-up, 7402 participants (11.7%) developed hypertension. The prediction model included age, sex, body mass index (BMI), SBP, DBP, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, uric acid, proteinuria, current smoking, alcohol intake, eating rate, DBP by age, and BMI by age at baseline and was created by using Cox proportional hazards models to calculate 3-year absolute risks. The derivation analysis confirmed that the model performed well both with respect to discrimination and calibration (n=63495; C-statistic=0.885, 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.865-0.903; (2) statistic=13.6, degree of freedom [df]=7). In the external validation analysis, moreover, the model performed well both in its discrimination and calibration characteristics (n=14168; C-statistic=0.846; 95%CI, 0.775-0.905; (2) statistic=8.7, df=7). Adding LDL cholesterol, uric acid, proteinuria, alcohol intake, eating rate, and BMI by age to the base model yielded a significantly higher C-statistic, net reclassification improvement (NRI), and integrated discrimination improvement, especially NRInon-event (NRI=0.127, 95%CI=0.100-0.152; NRInon-event=0.108, 95%CI=0.102-0.117). In conclusion, a highly precise model with good performance was developed for predicting incident hypertension using the new parameters of eating rate, uric acid, proteinuria, and BMI by age.
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