Refinement of the Association of Serum C-reactive Protein Concentration and Coronary Heart Disease Risk by Correction for Within-Subject Variation over Time : The MONICA Augsburg Studies,1984-1987.
The authors sought to assess the repeatability of
measurements of C-reactive protein, an independent
predictor of coronary heart disease, in a large cohort of apparently healthy men and to correct earlier estimates
of the association of C-reactive protein and coronary heart disease for the measurement error in this protein. They
measured C-reactive protein by a high-sensitivity assay in 936 men aged 45–64 years in the MONICA (Monitoring
of Trends and Determinants in Cardiovascular Disease) Augsburg cohort in 1984–1985 and remeasured it 3
years later. All men were subjected to an 8-year follow-up of their cardiovascular status. The analytical variation
of the assay was small, with the analytical variance component at 1 percent of the within-subject variance
component, a repeatability coefficient of 25 percent, and a reliability coefficient of 1.00. In contrast, the within-
subject variation of C-reactive protein corresponded to a repeatability coefficient of 740 percent and a reliability
coefficient of 0.54, indicating considerable within-subject variation. Based on the authors’ estimates, three serial
determinations of C-reactive protein should be done to achieve a reliability of 0.75, the value they found for total
cholesterol. Correcting the hazard ratios in their original analysis of the association of coronary heart disease and
high-sensitivity-assay C-reactive protein for the measurement error in C-reactive protein and covariables leads
to a considerably larger estimate. The results suggest that the true association between C-reactive protein and
cardiovascular risk is underestimated by a single C-reactive protein determination, and that several serial C-
reactive protein measurements should be taken