TY - JOUR
T1 - Comparison of carotid plaque burden among healthy middle-aged men living in the US, Japan, and South Korea
AU - Vishnu, Abhishek
AU - Choo, Jina
AU - Kadota, Aya
AU - Barinas-Mitchell, Emma J.M.
AU - Fujiyoshi, Akira
AU - Long, Dorothy Leann
AU - Hisamatsu, Takashi
AU - Ahuja, Vasudha
AU - Nakamura, Yasuyuki
AU - Evans, Rhobert W.
AU - Miura, Katsuyuki
AU - Masaki, Kamal H.
AU - Shin, Chol
AU - Ueshima, Hirotsugu
AU - Sekikawa, Akira
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by grants HL068200 , HL071561 and U54GM104942 from the National Institutes of Health , Bethesda, MD, USA, Korea Center for Disease Control and Prevention (Government budget code: 2004-E71001-00, 205-E71001-00) and grants B 16790335 , A 13307016 , 17209023 , 21249043 , A 25253046 and B 23390174 from the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (Tokyo, Japan).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2018/9/1
Y1 - 2018/9/1
N2 - Background: Carotid plaque has emerged as a marker of coronary heart disease (CHD) risk. Comparison of carotid plaque burden between different race/ethnic groups may provide a relative estimate of their future CHD risk. Methods: We conducted a population-based study among apparently healthy middle-aged men aged 40–49 years (ERA JUMP study (n = 924)) and recruited 310 Whites in Pittsburgh, US, 313 Japanese in Otsu, Japan, and 301 Koreans in Ansan, South Korea. The number of carotid plaque and CHD risk factors was assessed using a standardized protocol across all centers. The burden of carotid plaque was compared between race/ethnic groups after adjustment for age and BMI, and after multivariable adjustment for other CHD risk factors using marginalized zero-inflated Poisson regression models. Cross-sectional associations of risk factors with plaque were examined. Results: Whites (22.8%) had more than four-fold higher prevalence (p < 0.01) of carotid plaque than Japanese men (4.8%) while the prevalence among Koreans was 10.6%. These differences remained significant after adjustment for age, BMI as well as other risk factors – incidence density ratio (95% confidence interval) for plaque was 0.13 (0.07, 0.24) for Japanese and 0.32 (0.18, 0.58) for Koreans as compared to Whites. Age, hypertension and diabetes were the only risk factors significantly associated with presence of carotid plaque in the overall population. Conclusion: Whites have significantly higher carotid plaque burden than men in Japan and Korea. Lower carotid plaque burden among Japanese and Koreans is independent of traditional CVD risk factors.
AB - Background: Carotid plaque has emerged as a marker of coronary heart disease (CHD) risk. Comparison of carotid plaque burden between different race/ethnic groups may provide a relative estimate of their future CHD risk. Methods: We conducted a population-based study among apparently healthy middle-aged men aged 40–49 years (ERA JUMP study (n = 924)) and recruited 310 Whites in Pittsburgh, US, 313 Japanese in Otsu, Japan, and 301 Koreans in Ansan, South Korea. The number of carotid plaque and CHD risk factors was assessed using a standardized protocol across all centers. The burden of carotid plaque was compared between race/ethnic groups after adjustment for age and BMI, and after multivariable adjustment for other CHD risk factors using marginalized zero-inflated Poisson regression models. Cross-sectional associations of risk factors with plaque were examined. Results: Whites (22.8%) had more than four-fold higher prevalence (p < 0.01) of carotid plaque than Japanese men (4.8%) while the prevalence among Koreans was 10.6%. These differences remained significant after adjustment for age, BMI as well as other risk factors – incidence density ratio (95% confidence interval) for plaque was 0.13 (0.07, 0.24) for Japanese and 0.32 (0.18, 0.58) for Koreans as compared to Whites. Age, hypertension and diabetes were the only risk factors significantly associated with presence of carotid plaque in the overall population. Conclusion: Whites have significantly higher carotid plaque burden than men in Japan and Korea. Lower carotid plaque burden among Japanese and Koreans is independent of traditional CVD risk factors.
KW - Atherosclerotic plaque
KW - Carotid intima-media thickness
KW - Carotid stenosis
KW - Epidemiology
KW - Global health
KW - Risk factors
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U2 - 10.1016/j.ijcard.2018.03.010
DO - 10.1016/j.ijcard.2018.03.010
M3 - Article
C2 - 29887456
AN - SCOPUS:85048073417
SN - 0167-5273
VL - 266
SP - 245
EP - 249
JO - International Journal of Cardiology
JF - International Journal of Cardiology
ER -