Abstract P078: Exploring Social Inequalities in Ischemic Stroke Incidence in Europe. The MORGAM Project Cohort Component

Aims. To explore the magnitude of educational-class inequalities in ischemic stroke incidence in European populations, and to assess to what extent they can be explained by major risk factors. Methods. The MORGAM study comprised 45 cohorts from Nordic Countries (Finland, Denmark, Sweden), UK (Northe...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Circulation
Main Authors: Ferrario, Marco M, Veronesi, Giovanni, Chambless, Lloyd E, Kuulasmaa, Kari, Soderberg, Stefan, Salomaa, Veikko, Pajak, Andrzej, Amouyel, Philippe, Arveiler, Dominique, Drygas, Wojciech, Ferrieres, Jean, Hart, Nigel, Jorgensen, Torben, Malyutina, Sofia, Peters, Annette, Tamosiunas, Abdonas, Tunstall-Pedoe, Hugh, Cesana, Giancarlo
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health) 2015
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/circ.131.suppl_1.p078
http://journals.lww.com/00003017-201503101-00216
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Summary:Aims. To explore the magnitude of educational-class inequalities in ischemic stroke incidence in European populations, and to assess to what extent they can be explained by major risk factors. Methods. The MORGAM study comprised 45 cohorts from Nordic Countries (Finland, Denmark, Sweden), UK (Northern Ireland, Scotland), Central EU (France, Germany, Northern Italy) and East EU (Lithuania, Poland) and Russia. Only cohorts with both fatal and non-fatal ischemic strokes during follow-up (median 12 years, IQR 10-19 years) were included. Baseline data were collected adhering to MONICA-like procedures. Stroke subtype was attributed based on hospital records and death codes. We derived 3 educational classes from population-, sex- and birth year-specific tertiles of years of schooling. We used Poisson regression models to estimate the age-adjusted difference in event rates between the bottom and the top educational classes distribution (Slope Index of Inequality, SII) and the proportion of events to be redistributed to achieve equality in event rates among educational classes (Relative Concentration Index, RCI). We estimated the pooled age- and risk factors-adjusted hazard ratios for bottom to top education (Relative Index of Inequality, RII) from sex-specific Cox models with a dummy variable for each population . We also tested the hypothesis of homogeneity of inequalities across populations by adding population*education interaction terms. The contribution of risk factors to RII was measured by: (lnRII[RFadj]- lnRII[AGEadj]) / lnRII[AGEadj] Results. The cohorts included 66,052 CVD-free subjects aged 35-64 years (37,181 men) at baseline. In men, the age-adjusted inequalities in ischemic stroke rates (SIIs) were 125 events per 100,000 person-years in the Nordic Countries, 156 in the UK and 178 in Central EU; the RCIs were 6%, 13% and 21%, respectively. In women, an inverse gradient (higher rates among more educated subjects) was present in Northern Sweden; in the remaining populations, the SII (RCI) ranged between 4 ...