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Clinical ResearchPrediction of Incident Hypertension Risk in Women with Currently Normal Blood Pressure

Prediction of Incident Hypertension Risk in Women with Currently Normal Blood Pressure

Hypertension risk prediction calculated from a few readily available clinical factors—age, blood pressure, ethnicity, and body mass index—offers better calibration than more complicated models and improved risk stratification over blood pressure alone.

Abstract

Background
We examined whether a hypertension risk prediction model based on clinical characteristics and blood biomarkers might improve on risk prediction based on current blood pressure alone.

Methods
A prospective cohort of 14,822 normotensive women aged 45 years and older were followed over 8 years beginning in 1992 for the development of hypertension. Among a randomly selected two-thirds sample (N = 9427), hypertension prediction models were developed using 52 potential predictors and compared with a model based on blood pressure alone. Each prediction model was validated in the remaining one third (N = 5395).

Results
In the development cohort, the best prediction model for incident hypertension included age, blood pressure, ethnicity, body mass index, total grain intake, apolipoprotein B, lipoprotein(a), and C-reactive protein (Bayes Information Criteria [BIC] = 8788). Although this model was superior to a model based on blood pressure alone (BIC = 8957), it was only marginally better than a simplified model including age, blood pressure, ethnicity, and body mass index (BIC = 8820). In the validation cohort, the simplified model demonstrated adequate calibration, a c-index similar to that of the best model (0.703 vs 0.705), and when compared with the model based on blood pressure alone, reclassified 1499 participants to hypertension risk categories that proved to be closer to observed risk in all but one instance.

Conclusion
In this prospective cohort of initially normotensive women, a model based on readily available clinical information predicted incident hypertension better than a model based on blood pressure alone.

To read this article in its entirety, please visit our website.

— Nina P. Paynter, PhD, Nancy R. Cook, ScD, Brendan M. Everett, MD, Howard D. Sesso, ScD, MPH, Julie E. Buring, ScD, Paul M. Ridker, MD, MPH

This article was originally published in the May 2009 issue of The American Journal of Medicine.

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