A person's age can be used as effectively as medical tests to predict the risk of heart disease or stroke, according to a new study.
The report says offering treatment to all those over 55 would achieve the same results as screening through tests like blood pressure or cholesterol.
The authors, from Barts and the London Medical School, said it could save over 100,000 lives in England and Wales.
They said it would also be a simpler and more cost effective system.
The authors, writing in the open access journal PLoS ONE, said age was by far the biggest factor in assessing someone's risk of cardiovascular disease such as heart attack or stroke.
They compared the effects of two screening programmes on a theoretical population of 500,000 people.
The first approach used screening just by age, where, at the age of 55, people would be offered preventive treatment, regardless of whether they were at risk.
Professor Sir Nicholas Wald Director of the Wolfson Institute“The policy of selecting people above a certain age is, in effect, selecting people at high risk. It recognises that age is by far the most important determinant of that risk with other factors adding little extra prognostic information”
The second approach used existing screening methods, based on age and sex, and whether someone was a smoker or has high blood pressure or cholesterol.
They found that both approaches had an 84% detection rate, but that offering everyone preventive treatment at 55 would be more cost effective.
The two methods also had a broadly similar false-positive rate - in other words, using age alone would diagnose 24% of people as being at risk, when in fact they would not go on to develop heart problems.
Existing methods of screening identified 21% of false-positives.
Professor Sir Nicholas Wald is the lead author of the report and Director of the Wolfson Institute at Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry.
He said: "This study shows that age screening for future cardiovascular disease is simpler than current assessments, with a similar screening performance and cost effectiveness. It also avoids the need for blood tests and medical examinations.
"With age screening, all individuals above a specified age would be offered preventive treatment. Everyone would benefit because, for blood pressure and cholesterol, the lower the better.
"The policy of selecting people above a certain age is, in effect, selecting people at high risk. It recognises that age is by far the most important determinant of that risk with other factors adding little extra prognostic information.
"Prevention is better than measurement. Identif
No comments:
Post a Comment