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Abstract Reprints
1. Sex difference in high density
lipoprotein cholesterol in six countries
CE Davis, DH Williams, RG Oganov, S-C Tao, SL Rywik, Y Stein, JA
Little
Am J Epidemiol 1996;143(11):1100-6
It is known that women have higher levels of high density lipoprotein
(HDL) cholesterol than men. The authors examined the association between
HDL cholesterol and biologic sex in 8,631 women and 10,690 men aged 45-54
years from six countries studied between 1972 and 1989. The variation
in the sex difference for HDL cholesterol was significant; the smallest
difference (0.06 mmol/liter) was seen in China and the largest (0.40 mmol/liter)
in Canada. Adjustment for differences in body mass index, smoking, alcohol
use, and heart rate reduced but did not eliminate the variability. The
sex difference in HDL cholesterol levels, usually assumed to be due to
biologic factors, differs across cultures and may be related to environmental
factors.
2. Physical activity and cardiovascular
risk factors among elderly men in Finland, Italy, and The Netherlands
Fransje CH Bijnen, Edith JM Feskens, Carl J Caspersen, Simona Giampaoli,
Aulikki M Nissinen, Alessandro Menotti, Willem L Mosterd, Daan Kromhout
Am J Epidemiol 1996;143(6):553-61
Physical activity pattern and its relation with cardiovascular risk
factors was investigated in 1,402 men aged 69-90 years who participated
in the 30-year follow-up survey of the Finnish (Eastern and Western Finland),
Italian (Montegiorgio and Crevalcore), and Dutch (Zutphen) cohorts of
the Seven Countries Study. Physical activity was assessed with a validated
self-administered questionnaire designed for retired men. Total physical
activity varied largely within cohorts. Median total reported physical
activity ranged from 50 minutes/day in Montegiorgio to 89 minutes/day
in Crevalcore. Walking, gardening, and bicycling together contributed
more than 70% of total physical activity in all cohorts. Depending on
the definition of physical inactivity, the estimated prevalence of inactivity
varied between 5% and 33% in Zutphen and between 18% and 68% in Montegiorgio.
Total physical activity was inversely associated with resting heart rate
(r = -0.11, p < 0.001) and was positively associated with high density
lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol (r = 0.08, p < 0.01) in pooled data.
These associations remained statistically significant after adjustment
for age, cohort, smoking, body mass index, and alcohol intake. Total activity
was not associated with total cholesterol, non-HDL cholesterol, blood
pressure, or body mass index. The authors conclude that physical activity
may have a beneficial effect on HDL cholesterol levels in elderly men.
Walking, gardening, and bicycling contribute substantially to their physical
activity pattern.
3. Sex and time trends in cardiovascular
disease incidence and mortality: the Framingham Heart Study, 1950-1989
Pamela A Sytkowski, Ralph B D'Agostino, Albert Belanger, William
B Kannel
Am J Epidemiol 1996;143(4):338-50
Variations in cardiovascular disease mortality between sexes, over time,
and across regions point to population differences in the biologic, behavioral,
and environmental factors influencing cardiovascular health. The authors
examined 20-year trends in risk factors, incidence, and mortality among
women and men in Framingham, Massachusetts, who were members of the Framingham
Heart Study and aged 50-59 years in 1950, 1960, and 1970. The incidence
declined 21% between the female cohorts (p < 0.01 for trend) with the
greatest decline occurring between the 1950 and 1960 cohorts. The 20-year
incidence declined only 6% between the male cohorts despite an 18% decline
(p < 0.05 for trend) during the first 10 years of follow-up. Cardiovascular
disease mortality declined 59% between the female cohorts and 53% between
the male cohorts (both p < 0.001 for trend). The largest mortality
declines occurred between the 1950 and 1960 female cohorts during the
second 10 years of follow-up and between the 1960 and 1970 male cohorts
during both follow-up periods. Obesity, hypercholesterolemia, and high
blood pressure were significantly lower at baseline and 10 years later
in the 1970 female cohort compared with the 1950 cohort (all p < 0.001).
Smoking and high blood pressure were significantly lower at baseline and
10 years later in the 1970 male cohort compared with the 1950 cohort (both
p < 0.001). More than half of the 51% decline in coronary heart disease
mortality observed in women between 1950 and 1989 and one third to one
half of the 44% decline observed in men could be attributed to improvements
in risk factors in the 1970 cohorts.
4. Socioeconomic inequalities in
coronary heart disease and stroke mortality among Australian men, 1979-1993
Stan Bennett
Int J Epidemiol 1996;25(2):266-75
Background. During the 1970s in Australia, mortality from coronary
heart disease (CHD) and stroke was higher among lower socioeconomic groups
and inequalities were widening. This analysis examines subsequent trends
in socioeconomic inequalities, with reference to socioeconomic patterns
in major cardiovascular risk factors.
Methods. Socioeconomic status was defined by occupation. Age-standardized
mortality rates were calculated for men aged 25-64, using death registration
data and labour force estimates for 1979-1993. Risk factor data were taken
from three cross-sectional population surveys conducted in 1980, 1983
and 1989.
Results. Men in manual occupations were at least 35% more likely
to die from CHD than men in professional occupations, and 60% more likely
to die from stroke. Their 5-year population risk of a coronary event was
30% higher. Since 1979, both groups experienced reductions in coronary
risk and mortality.
Conclusions. Socioeconomic inequalities in CHD mortality continued
to widen during the early 1980s, stabilized thereafter and persisted into
the 1990s. Decreases in blood pressure and smoking prevalence contributed
most to declines in coronary risk and to socioeconomic differentials.
5. Protein consumption and bone
fractures in women
Diane Feskanich, Walter C Willett, Meir J Stampfer, Graham A Colditz
Am J Epidemiol 1996;143(5):472-9
Dietary protein increases urinary calcium losses and has been associated
with higher rates of hip fracture in cross-cultural studies. However,
the relation between protein and risk of osteoporotic bone fractures among
individuals has not been examined in detail. In this prospective study,
usual dietary intake was measured in 1980 in a cohort of 85,900 women,
aged 35-59 years, who were participants in the Nurses' Health Study. A
mailed food frequency questionnaire was used and incident hip (n = 234)
and distal forearm (n = 1,628) fractures were identified by self-report
during the following 12 years. Information on other factors related to
osteoporosis, including obesity, use of postmenopausal estrogen, smoking,
and physical activity, was collected on biennial questionnaires. Dietary
measures were updated in 1984 and 1986. Protein was associated with an
increased risk of forearm fracture (relative risk (RR) = 1.22, 95% confidence
interval (CI) 1.04-1.43, p for trend = 0.01) for women who consumed more
than 95 g per day compared with those who consumed less than 68 g per
day. A similar increase in risk was observed for animal protein, but no
association was found for consumption of vegetable protein. Women who
consumed five or more servings of red meat per week also had a significantly
increased risk of forearm fracture (RR = 1.23, 95% CI 1.01-1.50) compared
with women who ate red meat less than once per week. Recall of teenage
diet did not reveal any increased risk of forearm fracture for women with
higher consumption of animal protein or red meat during this earlier period
of life. No association was observed between adult protein intake and
the incidence of hip fractures, though power to assess this association
was low.
6. Silica and aluminum in drinking
water and cognitive impairment in the elderly
Hélène Jacqmin-Gadda, Daniel Commenges, Luc Letenneur, Jean-François
Dartigues
Epidemiology 1996;7:281-5
We studied the relation between silica and aluminum levels in drinking
water and the risk of cognitive impairment using data from a population-based
survey of 3,777 French subjects age 65 years and older. We also studied
the effect of pH and the concentrations of calcium, magnesium, fluorine,
zinc, copper, and iron. We used a mixed effects logistic regression adjusting
for age, sex, educational level, and occupation of the subjects. We confirmed
the inverse relation previously found between calcium level and cognitive
impairment. We found no important association between cognitive impairment
and fluorine, magnesium, iron, copper, or zinc. The association between
cognitive impairment and aluminum depended on the pH and the concentration
of silica: high levels of aluminum appeared to have a deleterious effect
when the silica concentration was low, but there was a protective effect
when the pH and the silica level were high. The threshold for an aluminum
effect, however, was very low (3.5 µg per liter) and did not support
the hypothesis of a deleterious effect for only high levels of aluminum.
7. Aspirin use and cognitive function
in the elderly
Til Stürmer, Robert J Glynn, Terry S Field, James O Taylor, Charles
H Hennekens
Am J Epidemiol 1996;143(7):683-91
Decline in cognitive function in the elderly is common and represents
a major clinical and public health concern. Aspirin may reduce the decline
in cognitive function by influencing multi-infarct dementia, but data
are sparse. The East Boston Senior Health Project is a population-based
cohort study that enrolled 3,809 community-dwelling residents aged 65
years and older in 1982-1983 and followed them with home visits every
3 years until 1988-1989. Trained interviewers assessed cognitive function
by using the Short Portable Mental Status Questionnaire and assessed medication
use, including over-the-counter drugs. Response to the Short Portable
Mental Status Questionnaire was scored as high, medium, or low, and decline
was defined as transition to a lower category. Participants who used drugs
containing aspirin in the 2 weeks prior to the interview were classified
as aspirin users. Multiple logistic regression was used to obtain adjusted
odds ratios and their 95% confidence intervals for decline of cognitive
function. The estimating equation approach was used to adjust the standard
errors for repeated measurements. Aspirin users had an odds ratio for
cognitive decline of 0.97 (95% confidence interval 0.82-1.15). Low frequency
of aspirin use (less than daily) was associated with an odds ratio of
0.87 (95% confidence interval 0.69-1.09). Although no substantial effect
was observed, the data are also compatible with a modest benefit of aspirin,
especially with intermittent use, on decline of cognitive function. Concern
about small residual biases from self-selection or confounding suggests
that randomized trials will be necessary to provide definitive data on
this question.
8. Income class and pharmaceutical
expenditure in Canada: 1964-1990
Joel Lexchin
Can J Public Health 1996;87(1):46-50
In the 1970s, nearly all Canadian provinces introduced drug programs
to subsidize purchases by low-income families. This study was undertaken
to determine whether these programs were successful in reducing out-of-pocket
pharmaceutical expenditures for low-income families and individuals, and
to compare expenditures in this group with those of high-income families.
Expenditures were calculated for a low- and a high-income group from Statistics
Canada surveys conducted between 1964 and 1990. In the low-income group
there was a 40% decline in drug expenditure measured as a percentage of
total family expenditure and this was coincident with the introduction
of provincial drug programs. However, the high-income group had an even
larger decrease in drug expenditure. Per capita spending as a percentage
of total family expenditure in the low-income group, was seven times that
of the high-income group and there was no change in this ratio after the
introduction of the drug plans.
9. A survey of population-based
drug databases in Canada
Elizabeth Miller, Brian Blatman, Thomas R Einarson
Can Med Assoc J 1996;154(12):1855-64
Objective: To identify the population-based drug databases in
Canada and to determine their comprehensiveness and accessibility for
performing pharmacoepidemiologic and outcomes research.
Design: Survey (four-part mailed questionnaire).
Setting: Public and private third-party drug plans across Canada.
Participants: All provincial and territorial drug plan or pharmacare
managers as well as selected private plan managers including health benefit
consultants, group insurers and claims adjudicators/pharmacy benefit managers
(CA/PBMs).
Outcome measures: Patient, drug and pharmacy information; potential
for electronic linkages to other provincial databases (e.g., physician,
hospital, vital statistics); accessibility of information; population
profile.
Results: Of the 32 recipients of the questionnaire 29 (91%) responded
and 18 (56%) completed the survey. Most databases were reported to contain
patient information (e.g., patient identification number, age, sex and
medication history) and prescription drug information (e.g., drug identification
number, strength, quantity and cost). Six provinces and one territory
reported the capability to link to other databases (e.g., hospital and
physician databases). One CA/PBM reported some links to selected long-term
disability data. All of the government databases except those in British
Columbia and the Yukon Territory allowed use of the data for research
purposes. Manitoba and Saskatchewan included all residents of the province
in their database; the others included selected groups (e.g., residents
65 years of age or older, people on social assistance or people covered
by private group insurance).
Conclusion: A number of public and private population-based databases
are available for use in pharmacoepidemiologic and outcomes research.
10. Direct and indirect costs
of asthma in Canada, 1990
Murray D Krahn, Catherine Berka, Peter Langlois, Allan S Detsky
Can Med Assoc J 1996;154(6):821-31
Objective: To calculate the direct and indirect costs of asthma
in Canada.
Design: Cost-of-illness study.
Setting: Canada.
Patients: All Canadians receiving inpatient or outpatient care
for asthma in 1990.
Outcome measures: Direct costs incurred by inpatient care, emergency
services, physician and nursing services, ambulance use, drugs and devices,
outpatient diagnostic tests, research and education. Indirect costs from
productivity loss due to absence from work, inability to perform housekeeping
activities, need to care for children with asthma who were absent from
school, time spent travelling and waiting for medical care, and premature
death from asthma. All costs are in 1990 Canadian dollars.
Results: Depending on assumptions, the total cost of asthma was
estimated to be between $504 million and $648 million. Direct costs were
$306 million. The single largest component of direct costs was the cost
of drugs ($124 million). The largest component of indirect costs was illness-related
disability ($76 million).
Conclusions: Annual costs of treating asthma are comparable to
the individual cost of infectious diseases, hematologic diseases, congenital
defects, perinatal illnesses, home care and ambulance services. Asthma
costs may increase in the future, given current morbidity and mortality
trends. Further evaluation of the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness
of available asthma interventions in addition to aggregate cost data are
required to determine whether resource allocation for the treatment of
asthma can be improved.
11. Cancer incidence and mortality
trends in Northeastern Ontario
Nancy E Lightfoot, Gordon M Fehringer, Randy J Bissett, D Claire
McChesney, Jason J White
Can J Public Health 1996;87(1):17-24
Over 629,000 people reside in the catchment area for the Northeastern
Ontario Regional Cancer Centre. Historically, the area was renowned for
employment in mining, forestry and lumbering, agriculture, the railway,
and pulp and paper. At present, it is known for mining; community, business,
and personal services; trade; manufacturing; and construction. Comparison
of cancer incidence and mortality trends for two decades (1971-1980 and
1981-1990) with those of Ontario has revealed statistically significant
excesses, at the 5% level or better, of trachea, bronchus, and lung cancer
cases (SIR = 123 for 1971-1980 and 125 for 1981-1990) and deaths in men
(SMR = 116 and 125, respectively); for women, excesses were observed for
trachea, bronchus and lung cancer cases (SIR = 114 and 118), and cervical
cancer cases (SIR = 142 and 115) and deaths (SMR = 133 and 128). Enhanced
recruitment strategies and early educational interventions are identified
as priorities.
12. Occupational risk factors
for prostate cancer: results from a case-control study in Montréal, Québec,
Canada
Kristan J Aronson, Jack Siemiatycki, Ronald Dewar, Michel Gérin
Am J Epidemiol 1996;143(4):363-73
A population-based case-control study of cancer and occupation was carried
out in Montréal, Canada. Between 1979 and 1986, 449 pathologically confirmed
cases of prostate cancer were interviewed, as well as 1,550 cancer controls
and 533 population controls. Job histories were evaluated by a team of
chemist/hygienists using a checklist of 294 workplace chemicals. After
preliminary evaluation, 17 occupations, 11 industries, and 27 substances
were selected for multivariate logistic regression analyses to estimate
the odds ratio between each occupational circumstance and prostate cancer
with control for potential confounders. There was moderate support for
risk due to the following occupations: electrical power workers, water
transport workers, aircraft fabricators, metal product fabricators, structural
metal erectors, and railway transport workers. The following substances
exhibited moderately strong associations: metallic dust, liquid fuel combustion
products, lubricating oils and greases, and polyaromatic hydrocarbons
from coal. While the population attributable risk, estimated at between
12% and 21% for these occupational exposures, may be an overestimate due
to our method of analysis, even if the true attributable fraction were
in the range of 5-10%, this represents an important public health issue.
13. Cervical cancer screening:
are the 1989 recommendations still valid?
E Jean Parboosingh, George Anderson, E Aileen Clarke, Suzanne Inhaber,
Elizabeth Kaegi, Christina Mills, Yang Mao, Lorie Root, Gavin Stuart,
Sylvie Stachenko
Can Med Assoc J 1996;154(12):1847-53
Although screening for cervical cancer has been shown to be effective
in reducing the morbidity and mortality associated with this disease,
and despite many attempts to encourage the development of provincial programs,
as of 1995 no province had a comprehensive screening program for cervical
cancer. Participants at the Interchange '95 workshop, held in Ottawa in
November 1995, reviewed the recommendations of the 1989 National Workshop
on Screening for Cancer of the Cervix and identified factors that have
impeded their implementation. Participants discussed the need for comprehensive
information systems, quality control and strategies to increase recruitment
of unscreened and underscreened women. They concluded that the formation
of a Cervical Cancer Prevention Network involving key stakeholders will
facilitate the development and implementation of provincial programs to
ensure optimal screening. They agreed that, in the interim, recommendations
for practising physicians should remain as they were following the 1989
workshop.
14. Dietary assessment in epidemiology:
comparison of a food frequency and a diet history questionnaire with a
7-day food record
Meera Jain, Geoffrey R Howe, Thomas Rohan
Am J Epidemiol 1996;143(9):953-60
The validity of two types of diet assessment methods, a self-administered
food frequency questionnaire and an interviewer-administered detailed
diet history, was assessed relative to a 7-day food record on a population-based
sample of 95 men and 108 women in Toronto, Canada, between May 1989 and
July 1990. Each study subject completed both questionnaire methods, a
food frequency questionnaire and an interviewer administered diet history,
as well as a 7-day food record in a crossover design. Data were analyzed
for both unadjusted and energy-adjusted nutrients to estimate Pearson's
and intraclass correlations and agreement within categories. Mean values
for the intake of most nutrients assessed by the two questionnaire methods
were similar. Average, energy-adjusted Pearson's correlation coefficients
for men between a food frequency questionnaire and a 7-day food record
were 0.55 for macronutrients and 0.48 for micronutrients compared with
0.47 for macro- and 0.48 for micronutrients between an interviewer-administered
diet history and a 7-day food record. For women, they were 0.48 for macro-and
0.54 for micronutrients between a food frequency questionnaire and a 7-day
food record and 0.46 and 0.49, respectively, between an interviewer-administered
diet history and a 7-day food record. The energy-adjusted Pearson correlations
were generally higher than were the energy-unadjusted Pearson correlations
and the intraclass correlations. The present study suggests that a food
frequency questionnaire is comparable with an interviewer-administered
diet history as a predictor of nutrients as estimated from a 7-day food
record.
15. Determinants of mortality
from cystic fibrosis in Canada, 1970-1989
Mary Corey, Vernon Farewell
Am J Epidemiol 1996;143(10):1007-17
The frequency, prevalence, and mortality patterns of cystic fibrosis
were analyzed in 3,795 patients documented in the Canadian Patient Data
Registry in 1970-1989. Cystic fibrosis frequency in the 1970-1979 birth
cohort was virtually identical to the commonly quoted 1 in 2,500. In 1985-1989,
median survival age was 36.7 years for males and 27.8 years for females,
compared with 26.6 and 19.7, respectively, in 1970-1974. However, there
were significant regional differences when Canada was divided into the
four regions, East, Quebec, Ontario, and West. In Quebec, patients were
younger at diagnosis and until recently had greater mortality than patients
in other regions, which suggests more severe disease; dramatically improved
survival in the 1980s coincided with a change from a restricted fat diet
to a high fat diet. Improved survival in Ontario in the 1970s accompanied
this change in dietary therapy, which may also account for good survival
throughout the study period in the East. The West showed gradually improving
survival, similar to that reported in other parts of the world. Proportional
hazards analysis showed pulmonary function to be the best predictor of
survival. Poorer survival in females was associated with poorer weight,
but the interrelation of declining pulmonary function, weight maintenance,
sex, and mortality requires further study. The effect of pulmonary colonization
with Pseudomonas aeruginosa was confounded with degree of pulmonary
dysfunction, but colonization with Burkholderia cepacia (previously
Pseudomonas cepacia) was associated with increased mortality at
all levels of pulmonary function.
16. Influence of gender on susceptibility
to multiple sclerosis and age of onset in concordant sibships
Sharon A Warren, KG Warren
Int J Epidemiol 1996;25(1):142-5
Background. Research has produced conflicting findings about
whether there is an excess of like-sexed pairs among concordant multiple
sclerosis (MS) sibships. Although a positive correlation in onset age
among sibling pairs overall has been reported, no data have been published
describing age at onset correlations for like-sexed versus unlike-sexed
pairs. The purpose of this study was to provide additional information
on both issues.
Methods. Patients with an MS sibling were sought through the
files of the University of Alberta MS Clinic (Edmonton, Canada). The clinic
neurologist either reviewed clinical/autopsy material or assessed relatives
of index cases prior to accepting the relative as having MS. Pairs of
siblings (excluding twins) were divided into (1) male-male pairs, (2)
female-female pairs, and (3) female-male pairs.
Results. A total of 62 concordant sibling pairs were identified.
There were 33 like-sexed pairs (6 male-male/27 female-female) and 29 unlike-sexed
pairs. The observed number of like-sexed pairs was not significantly different
from the expected frequency using 2 x 2 x² analysis, where expected
values represent the binomial distribution predicted from the frequency
of each sex as determined by total number of males and females. The age
at onset intraclass correlation coefficient was -0.09 for sibling pairs
overall, -0.22 for like-sexed pairs and +0.02 for unlike-sexed pairs.
Conclusions. This study does not provide evidence for an association
between disease susceptibility and gender in siblings concordant for MS;
nor does it suggest that genetics plays a role in onset age.
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