Serum cholesterol and mortality rates in a native American population with low cholesterol concentrations - A U-shaped association

被引:20
作者
FagotCampagna, A
Hanson, RL
Narayan, KMV
Sievers, ML
Pettitt, DJ
Nelson, RG
Knowler, WC
机构
[1] Natl. Inst. Diabet. Digest. K., Phoenix, AZ
[2] Natl. Inst. Diabet. Digest. K., Phoenix, AZ 85014
关键词
cholesterol; risk factors; mortality;
D O I
10.1161/01.CIR.96.5.1408
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background Low serum cholesterol concentrations are associated with high death rates from cancer, trauma, and infectious diseases, but the meaning of these associations remains controversial. The present report evaluates whether low cholesterol is likely to be a causal factor for mortality from all causes or from specific causes. Methods and Results Among 4553 Pima Indians greater than or equal to 20 pears old, a population with low serum cholesterol (median, 4.50 mmol/L), 1077 deaths occurred during a mean follow-up of 12.8 years. Trauma was the most common cause. The relationship between serum cholesterol measured at 2-year intervals and age-and sex-standardized mortality rates was U-shaped. Cholesterol was related positively to mortality from cardiovascular diseases and diabetes (including nephropathy) and negatively to mortality from cancer and alcohol-related diseases. The relationship was U-shaped for mortality from infectious diseases, and cholesterol was not related to mortality from trauma. Change in cholesterol from one examination to the next was positively related to mortality from diabetes. In proportional-hazards models adjusted for potential confounders, the relationship between baseline cholesterol and mortality was U-shaped for all causes and diabetes and positive for cardiovascular diseases. Other relationships were nonsignificant. Among 3358 subjects followed greater than or equal to 5 years, the relationship was significant and positive only for mortality from cardiovascular diseases. Conclusions Despite a high exposure risk for Pima Indians, If low cholesterol level is a causal factor, the relationships between low serum cholesterol and high mortality rates probably result from diseases lowering cholesterol rather than from a low cholesterol causing the diseases.
引用
收藏
页码:1408 / 1415
页数:8
相关论文
共 58 条
[41]   HYPOTHESIS - LOW SERUM-CHOLESTEROL, SUICIDE, AND INTERLEUKIN-2 [J].
PENTTINEN, J .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1995, 141 (08) :716-718
[42]  
REAVEN GM, 1995, IDF B S, V35, P11
[43]  
ROSE G, 1980, LANCET, V1, P523
[44]  
ROTHMAN KJ, 1979, NIH791649 PUBL, P11
[46]   LOW SERUM-CHOLESTEROL AND DEATH DUE TO ACCIDENTS, VIOLENCE, OR SUICIDE [J].
SCHUIT, AJ ;
DEKKER, JM ;
SCHOUTEN, EG ;
KOK, FJ .
LANCET, 1993, 341 (8848) :827-827
[47]   INVERSE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN SERUM TOTAL CHOLESTEROL AND CANCER MORTALITY IN DUTCH CIVIL-SERVANTS [J].
SCHUIT, AJ ;
VANDIJK, CEMJ ;
DEKKER, JM ;
SCHOUTEN, EG ;
KOK, FJ .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1993, 137 (09) :966-976
[48]  
SHERWIN RW, 1987, JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC, V257, P943
[49]   ADVERSE MORTALITY EXPERIENCE OF A SOUTHWESTERN AMERICAN-INDIAN COMMUNITY - OVERALL DEATH RATES AND UNDERLYING CAUSES OF DEATH IN PIMA-INDIANS [J].
SIEVERS, ML ;
NELSON, RG ;
BENNETT, PH .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1990, 43 (11) :1231-1242
[50]   PLASMA-CHOLESTEROL CONCENTRATION AND MORTALITY - THE WHITEHALL STUDY [J].
SMITH, GD ;
SHIPLEY, MJ ;
MARMOT, MG ;
ROSE, G .
JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 1992, 267 (01) :70-76