Login | English | Deutsch

 Forschungsinformationssystem Universität Greifswald




Originalartikel | erschienen - Druck

Self-perceived quality of life predicts mortality risk better than a multi-biomarker panel, but the combination of both does best


BMC Medical Research Methodology 2011 ; 1(11): 103 -






Bibliometrische Indikatoren



Impact Factor = 2,668

DOI = 10.1186/1471-2288-11-103

PubMed-ID = 21749697


Autoren

Haring R*, Feng Y, Moock J, Völzke H, Dörr M, Nauck M, Kohlmann T


Abstract

Associations between measures of subjective health and mortality risk have previously been shown. We assessed the impact and comparative predictive performance of a multi-biomarker panel on this association. METHODS: Data from 4,261 individuals aged 20-79 years recruited for the population-based Study of Health in Pomerania was used. During an average 9.7 year follow-up, 456 deaths (10.7%) occurred. Subjective health was assessed by SF-12 derived physical (PCS-12) and mental component summaries (MCS-12), and a single-item self-rated health (SRH) question. We implemented Cox proportional-hazards regression models to investigate the association of subjective health with mortality and to assess the impact of a combination of 10 biomarkers on this association. Variable selection procedures were used to identify a parsimonious set of subjective health measures and biomarkers, whose predictive ability was compared using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves, C-statistics, and reclassification methods. RESULTS: In age- and gender-adjusted Cox models, poor SRH (hazard ratio (HR), 2.07; 95% CI, 1.34-3.20) and low PCS-12 scores (lowest vs. highest quartile: HR, 1.75; 95% CI, 1.31-2.33) were significantly associated with increased risk of all-cause mortality; an association independent of various covariates and biomarkers. Furthermore, selected subjective health measures yielded a significantly higher C-statistic (0.883) compared to the selected biomarker panel (0.872), whereas a combined assessment showed the highest C-statistic (0.887) with a highly significant integrated discrimination improvement of 1.5% (p < 0.01). CONCLUSION: Adding biomarker information did not affect the association of subjective health measures with mortality, but significantly improved risk stratification. Thus, a combined assessment of self-reported subjective health and measured biomarkers may be useful to identify high-risk individuals for intensified monitoring.

Veröffentlicht in

BMC Medical Research Methodology


Jahr 2011
Impact Factor (2011) 2,668
Volume 1
Issue 11
Seiten 103 -
Open Access nein
Peer reviewed nein
Artikelart Originalartikel
Artikelstatus erschienen - Druck
DOI 10.1186/1471-2288-11-103
PubMed-ID 21749697

Allgemeine Daten zur Fachzeitschrift

Kurzbezeichnung: BMC MED RES METHODOL
ISSN: N/A
eISSN: 1471-2288
Land: ENGLAND
Sprache: English
Kategorie(n):
  • GENETICS & HEREDITY
  • BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY


Impact Factor Entwicklung

Jahr Impact Factor
2009 2,303
2010 2,153
2011 2,668
2012 2,211
2013 2,168
2014 2,27
2015 3,059
2016 3,295
2017 2,524
2018 2,509
2019 3,031
2020 4,615
2021 4,612
2022 4
2023 3,9
2024 3,4

Beteiligte Departments

Community Medicine

Projekte

GANI_MED Greifswald Approach to Individualized Medicine (Projektverbund)

Departments

Community Medicine

FAQs | Impressum | Datenschutz