Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
2013
Journal
BMC Public Health
Volume
Volume 13, Issue 1
Abstract
Background
Physical and Mental Component Summary (PCS, MCS, respectively) scales of SF- 36 health-related-quality-of-life have been associated with all-cause and cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality. Their relationships with CVD incidence are unclear. This study purpose was to test whether PCS and/or MCS were associated with CVD incidence and death.
Methods
Postmenopausal women (aged 50–79 years) in control groups of the Women’s Health Initiative clinical trials (n = 20,308) completed the SF-36 and standardized questionnaires at trial entry. Health outcomes, assessed semi-annually, were verified with medical records. Cox regressions assessed time to selected outcomes during the trial phase (1993–2005).
Results
A total of 1075 incident CVD events, 204 CVD-specific deaths, and 1043 total deaths occurred during the trial phase. Women with low versus high baseline PCS scores had less favorable health profiles at baseline. In multivariable models adjusting for baseline confounders, participants in the lowest PCS quintile (reference = highest quintile) exhibited 1.8 (95%CI: 1.4, 2.3), 4.7 (95%CI: 2.3, 9.4), and 2.1 (95%CI: 1.7, 2.7) times greater risk of CVD incidence, CVD-specific death, and total mortality, respectively, by trial end; whereas, MCS was not significantly associated with CVD incidence or death.
Conclusion
Physical health, assessed by self-report of physical functioning, is a strong predictor of CVD incidence and death in postmenopausal women; similar self-assessment of mental health is not. PCS should be evaluated as a screening tool to identify older women at high risk for CVD development and death.
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
APA Citation
Saquib, N., Brunner, R., Kubo, J., Tindle, H., Kroenke, C., Desai, M., Daviglus, M., Allen, N., Martin, l.W., Robinson, J., & Stefanick, M.L. (2013). Self-perceived physical health predicts cardiovascular disease incidence and death among postmenopausal women. BMC Public Health, 13:468.
Peer Reviewed
1
Open Access
1
Names of the institutional review boards that approved the Women’s Health Initiative Study
Adjusted association of SF-36 subscales with cardiovascular (CVD) incidence, CVD-specific, and all-cause death (1993-2005).docx (16 kB)
Adjusted association of SF-36 subscales with cardiovascular (CVD) incidence, CVD-specific, and all-cause death (1993-2005)
Comments
Reproduced with permission of BMC Public Health