Health
Risk calculators may overestimate heart attack risk
New York, Feb 17
Most "risk calculators" used
to gauge a patient's chances of suffering a heart attack significantly
overestimate the likelihood of a heart attack, warns a study.
Four
out of five widely used clinical calculators considerably overrate
risk, including the most recent one unveiled in 2013 by the American
Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology, as per the
findings.
Physicians commonly use standardized risk assessment
systems, or algorithms, to decide whether someone needs care with daily
aspirin and cholesterol-lowering drugs or just watchful waiting and
follow-up exams.
These algorithms calculate heart attack
probability using a combination of factors, such as gender, age, smoking
history, cholesterol levels, blood pressure and diabetes among others.
"Our
results reveal a lack of predictive accuracy in risk calculators and
highlight an urgent need to re-examine and fine-tune our existing risk
assessment techniques," said senior investigator Michael Blaha from
Johns Hopkins University.
For the study, the researchers followed 4,200 participants, ages 50 to 74, for over a decade.
The
findings underscore the perils of over-reliance on standardised
algorithms and highlight the importance of individualised risk
assessment that includes additional variables, such as other medical
conditions, family history of early heart disease, level of physical
activity, its presence and amount of calcium buildup in the heart's
vessels, the researchers said.
The study appeared in the Annals of Internal Medicine.