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Activity Number: 442 - Disease Prediction, Statistical Methods for Genetic Epidemiology and Mis
Type: Contributed
Date/Time: Thursday, August 12, 2021 : 4:00 PM to 5:50 PM
Sponsor: Section on Statistics in Epidemiology
Abstract #318973
Title: Applied Methods in Studying Age, Leukocyte Telomere Length, and Risk of Stroke in the Strong Heart Study
Author(s): Caroline Goode* and Jinying Zhao and Richard Devereux and Santosh Murthy and Alexander Merkler and Parmanand Singh and Jason Umans and Barbara Howard and Shelley Cole and Amanda M. Fretts and Lyle Best and Tauqeer Ali and Elisa Lee and Ying Zhang
Companies: The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center and University of Florida Gainesville and Weil Cornell Medicine and Weil Cornell Medicine and Weil Cornell Medicine and Weil Cornell Medicine and Georgetown University and Georgetown University and Texas Biomedical Research Institute and University of Washington and Missouri Breaks Industries Research Inc. and University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center and The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center and University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center
Keywords: Frailty model; Collinearity; Longitudinal study; Biological aging; Chronological aging; Stroke
Abstract:

Leukocyte telomere length (LTL) is a marker of biological aging. Statistical methods to differentiate the effect of LTL from the effect of chronological aging on incident stroke are not established. We conduct research among participants of the Strong Heart Study (n=5,835), who were assessed during a clinic visit and followed for stroke events through 2018. To study the association between LTL and stroke, we used frailty models based on the proportional hazards that account for family relatedness. The correlation between LTL and age was addressed using Studentized residuals of a linear model. There were 428 (7.34%) stroke cases over a mean follow-up time of 17 years. We found a non-linear relationship. After adjusting for covariates, the hazard ratios for the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th quartile vs. those in the shortest LTL quartile are 0.8 (95%CI: 0.6-1.1; p value=0.71), 0.6 (95% CI: 0.4, 0.9; p-value: 0.005), and 0.9 (95%CI: 0.7-1.2; p-value=0.4). Participants in the 3rd LTL quartile had significantly lower risk of developing stroke. The current report provides an application of methods to analyze highly correlated variables in frailty models of unbalanced family clusters.


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