Abstract

This study was carried out to determine whether serum TSH levels improve the prediction of cardiovascular risk in addition to common clinical risk scores, given the association between subclinical hypothyroidism (SCH) and cardiovascular disease (CVD). We carried out an observational study in a prospective cohort. The study included a total of 344 SCH and 2624 euthyroid participants aged over 40 years and who were without previously recorded CVDs were included in this study analysis. We measured thyroid function and traditional risk factors at baseline and estimated the 10-year cumulative incidence of CVD in a gender-stratified analysis. During 10 years of follow-up, 251 incident cardiovascular events were recorded. The elevation of serum TSH levels significantly increased the CV risk independent of conventional risk factors in men. In the atherosclerotic CVD (ASCVD) risk score or the Reynolds risk score (RRS) model, the addition of serum TSH levels had no effect on model discrimination as measured by the area under the curve in either women or men. Adding serum TSH did not improve the net reclassification improvement in either women (3.48% (P=0.29) in the ASCVD, -0.89% (P=0.75) in the RRS, respectively) or men (-1.12% (P=0.69), 3.45% (P=0.20), respectively) and only mildly affected the integrated discrimination Improvement in the ASCVD-adjusted model (0.30% in women and 0.42% in men, both P=0.05). In the context of common risk scoring models, the additional assessment of serum TSH levels provided little incremental benefit for the prediction of CV risk.

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