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Distribution of Coronary Artery Calcium by Age, Sex, and Race Among Patients 30-45 Years Old

Authors :
Aamir Javaid
Zeina A. Dardari
Joshua D. Mitchell
Seamus P. Whelton
Omar Dzaye
Joao A.C. Lima
Donald M. Lloyd-Jones
Matthew Budoff
Khurram Nasir
Daniel S. Berman
John Rumberger
Michael D. Miedema
Todd C. Villines
Michael J. Blaha
Source :
J Am Coll Cardiol, Journal of the American College of Cardiology, vol 79, iss 19
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

BackgroundCoronary artery calcium (CAC) is a measure of atherosclerotic burden and is well-validated for risk stratification in middle- to older-aged adults. Few studies have investigated CAC in younger adults, and there is no calculator for determining age-, sex-, and race-based percentiles among individuals aged0 and develop age-sex-race percentiles for U.S. adults aged 30-45 years.MethodsWe harmonized 3 datasets-CARDIA (Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults), the CAC Consortium, and the Walter Reed Cohort-to study CAC in 19,725 asymptomatic Black and White individuals aged 30-45 years without known atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. After weighting each cohort equally, the probability of CAC >0 and age-sex-race percentiles of CAC distributions were estimated using nonparametric techniques.ResultsThe prevalence of CAC >0 was 26% among White males, 16% among Black males, 10% among White females, and 7% among Black females. CAC >0 automatically placed all females at >90th percentile. CAC >0 placed White males at the 90th percentile at age 34 years compared with Black males at age 37 years. An interactive webpage allows one to enter an age, sex, race, and CAC score to obtain the corresponding estimated percentile.ConclusionsIn a large cohort of U.S. adults aged 30-45 years without symptomatic atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, the probability of CAC >0 varied by age, sex, and race. Estimated percentiles may help interpretation of CAC scores among young adults relative to their age-sex-race matched peers and can henceforth be included in CAC score reporting.

Details

ISSN :
15583597
Volume :
79
Issue :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....be16c80ffbed0eee561a41c45e41a43b