Summary
Objectives: The aim was to validate the Framingham coronary heart disease (CHD) risk function
with the formula by Wilson et al. (1998) in Czech men.
Methods: The validation was performed within the 20-year primary prevention study of atherosclerotic
risk factors (STULONG) including 1417 middle-aged men from the Czech Republic (Prague).
A total of 646 men examined in 1979-1988, and followed-up for ten years, were included
into the validation study. The calibration and discrimination ability of the Framingham
risk function in the Czech population were explored.
Results: The estimated 10-year risk of CHD by the Framingham risk function was 12.8% in 646
men, significantly higher than the observed risk (16.4 %), p = 0.013. The trend in
the 10-year incidence of CHD was significantly increasing with quintiles of the estimated
risk, p < 0.001. After the recalibration of the Framingham risk function, there was
an insignificant difference between the estimated (18.2%) and observed (16.4%) risks
of CHD, p = 0.320. The Framingham risk function classified men into those with and
without CHD in the 10-year period with accuracy over 60%.
Conclusions: Unlike some validation studies from Western Europe, the Framingham risk function
significantly underestimated the 10-year CHD risk in the Czech Republic. In agreement
with these studies, the incidence of CHD was significantly increasing across quintiles
of the estimated risk.
Keywords
External validation - Framingham risk function - coronary heart disease