Background The aim of this study was to build risk charts
for the assessment of cardiovascular mortality of the CUORE project, an
Italian longitudinal study, and to compare them with the systematic coronary
risk evaluation (SCORE) project charts for low risk European
countries.
Design Random population samples enrolled in the 1980s
and 1990s in Italy were included in the analysis: 7520 men and 13 127 women
aged 35-69 years without previous cardiovascular events and with a mean
follow-up period of 10 years for cardiovascular disease. ICD-9 codes of
death certificates similar to those of the SCORE project were considered
when they appear as first cause of death.
Methods Sex-stratified Cox proportional hazard model
including age, systolic blood pressure, ratio between total and HDL
cholesterol, and smoking habit as risk factors was used to assess
cardiovascular mortality.
Results Analysis showed that all risk factors included in
the model were statistically significant. The corresponding area under the
receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.825 (95% confidence
interval: 0.803-0.846) for men and 0.850 (0.823-0.877) for women. The CUORE
project charts yielded similar results to the corresponding charts of the
SCORE project: Lin's coefficient was 0.929 for men and 0.935 for
women.
Conclusion The comparison between CUORE and SCORE
mortality risk charts shows that SCORE charts reflect quite well the Italian
cardiovascular mortality and, correspondingly, Italian cohorts of the CUORE
project are quite representative of European countries at low risk for
cardiovascular mortality.