Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Polygenic risk score adds to a clinical risk score in the prediction of cardiovascular disease in a clinical setting

Nilesh J. Samani, Emma Beeston, Chris Greengrass, Fernando Riveros-Mckay, Radosław Dębiec, Daniel Lawday, Qingning Wang, Charley Budgeon, Peter S. Braund, Richard Bramley, Shireen Kharodia, Michelle Newton, Andrea Marshall, Andre Krzeminski, Azhar Zafar, Anuj Chahal, A. Heer, Kamlesh Khunti, Nitin Joshi, Mayur Lakhani, Azhar Farooqi, Vincent Plagnol, Peter Donnelly, Michael E. Weale, Christopher P. Nelson

European Heart Journal · 2024

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Summary

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: A cardiovascular disease polygenic risk score (CVD-PRS) can stratify individuals into different categories of cardiovascular risk, but whether the addition of a CVD-PRS to clinical risk scores improves the identification of individuals at increased risk in a real-world clinical setting is unknown. METHODS: The Genetics and the Vascular Health Check Study (GENVASC) was embedded within the UK National Health Service Health Check (NHSHC) programme which invites individuals between 40-74 years of age without known CVD to attend an assessment in a UK general practice where CVD risk factors are measured and a CVD risk score (QRISK2) is calculated. Between 2012-2020, 44,141 individuals (55.7% females, 15.8% non-white) who attended an NHSHC in 147 participating practices acros

Subject
Dietary patterns & chronic disease
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
System type
Other
DOI
10.1093/eurheartj/ehae342
Catalogue ID
SNmoj1yleu-47qeux
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