Copyright © 1997 by the European Society of Cardiology.
© 1997 The European Society of cardiology
Changes in population cholesterol levels and coronary heart disease deaths in seven countries









*Division of Epidemiology, School of Public Health Univesity of Minnesota Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S A.
Public Health Research Division, National Institute of Public Health and Environment Bilthoven, The Netherlands
Department of Community Health and General Practice, University of Kuopio Kuopio, Finland
Istituto di Scienza dell' Alimentazione, Universita' di Perugia Perugia, Italy
¶Laboratorio di Epidemiologia e Biostatistica Istituto Superiore di Sanita' Rome, Italy
||Nutrition Unit, World Health Organization Geneva, Switzerland
**University of Zagreb Zagreb, Croatia

Institute for Cardiovascular Diseases, University Medical Center Belgrade, Yugoslavia

Athens Medical Center Athens, Greece

Kurume University Hospital Medical Center Kurume, Japan
revised 3 April 1996; accepted 4 April 1996.
Correspondence: Alessandro Menotti MD, PhD. c/o Cardioricerca, Via Adda 87, Rome I-00198, Italy
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Are trends in coronary heart disease deaths based on risk factor changes?
OBJECTIVE: To study the relationship between trends in coronary deaths and changes in blood cholesterol in the Seven Countries Study.
MATERIAL AND METHODS: Sixteen cohorts of men aged 4059 years from seven countries (U.S.A., Finland, the Netherlands, Italy, Croatia (former Yugoslavia), Serbia (former Yugoslavia), Greece, Japan) were units for the analyses of serum cholesterol measured at entry and after 5 and 10 years, and for mortality over 25 years.
RESULTS: In the populations, the ecological relationship of mean serum cholesterol at entry to late coronary heart disease death rates during the 10- to 25-year follow-up was weak, with an R-square of 0·31. Cholesterol measurements made at year 10, and an indicator of cholesterol change during the first 10 years, increased the association (R-square, 0·49). A negative and significant interaction was shown between baseline population cholesterol levels and their 10-year change. As an indicator of acceleration in mortality, cholesterol change over 10 years was also positively correlated (partial R-square 0·44) with the ratio of 25-year to 5-year deaths.
CONCLUSIONS: In the Seven Countries Study, late coronary heart disease death rates are largely explained by changes in blood cholesterol levels during the early phases of the study, mainly due to increases in lower cholesterol levels among some cohorts.
Key Words: Coronary heart disease mortality cholesterol change population studies prediction
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