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Does sex matter in the associations between classic risk factors and fatal coronary heart disease in populations from the Asia-Pacific region?
Authors
Y He
A Hozawa
+82 more
T Ohkubo
K Jamrozik
P Norman
Y Imai
A Dobson
K Sakata
T Hashimoto
G Giles
IS Kim
SH Jee
M Hobbs
R Broadhurst
K Nakachi
I Suh
SR Choudhury
Y Kita
JL Fuh
B Zhou
XH Fang
SC Li
QD Yang
ZM Chen
MS Huang
Z Hong
H Tanaka
SC Ho
A Nozaki
J Woo
H Horibe
Y Matsutani
H Iwamoto
Y Kiyohara
M Fujishima
CQ Jiang
TH Lam
YH Li
R Jackson
XF Duan
M Kagaya
K Hughes
DF Gu
J Lee
GL Shan
D Heng
LQ Chen
ZL Wu
P Sritara
WH Pan
A Tamakoshi
SK Chew
XG Wu
XH Yu
J Zhou
H Christensen
MW Knuiman
G Whitlock
S Macmahon
S Ameratunga
R Norton
JX Xie
LS Liu
Z Tang
TA Welborn
G Andrews
CH Yao
ZS Wu
T Yamada
BF Zhou
N Kubo
M Nakamura
N Aoki
H Maegawa
H Ueshima
HY Zhang
A Okayama
K Shimamoto
R Huxley
S Saito
ZZ Li
HY Zhang
TH Lam
SX Yao
Publication date
1 January 2005
Publisher
United States
Doi
Abstract
Background: There is much interest in promoting healthy heart awareness among women. However, little is known about the reasons behind the lower rates of heart disease among women compared with men, and why this risk difference diminishes with age. Previous comparative studies have generally had insufficient numbers of women to quantify such differences reliably. Methods: We carried out an individual participant data meta-analysis of 39 cohort studies (32 from Asian countries and 7 from Australia and New Zealand). Cox models were used to estimate hazard ratios (HR) for coronary death, comparing men to women. Further adjustments were made for several proven coronary risk factors to quantify their contributions to the sex differential. Sex interactions were tested for the same risk factors. Results: During 4 million person-years of follow-up, there were 1989 (926 female) deaths from coronary heart disease (CHD). The age-adjusted and study-adjusted male/female HR (95% confidence interval [95% CI]) was 2.05 (1.89-2.22). At baseline, 54% of men vs. 7% of women were current smokers; hence, adjustment for smoking explained the largest component (20%) of this HR. A significant sex interaction was observed between systolic blood pressure (SBP) and CHD mortality such that a 10 mm Hg increase was associated with a 15% greater increase in the relative risk (RR) of coronary death in women compared with men (p = 0.002). Conclusions: Only a small amount of the sex differential in coronary death could be explained by differences in the prevalence of classic risk factors. Alternative explanations are required to explain the age-related attenuation of the sex difference in CHD risk. © Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.published_or_final_versio
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