Ezt az oldalt automatikusan lefordították, és a fordítás pontossága nem garantált. Kérjük, olvassa el a angol verzió forrásszöveghez.

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Twin Study

2016. március 15. frissítette: National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
To assess genetic effects on the variation of cardiovascular and pulmonary risk factors in a cohort of 514 pairs of white male veteran twins.

A tanulmány áttekintése

Részletes leírás

BACKGROUND:

In 1966, the National Academy of Sciences-National Research Council (NAS-NRC) began the development of a twin registry. Through state birth records, a group of twins born in 1917-1927 was ascertained and matched to veteran records to obtain a roster of 16,000 twins where both members of the pair were in military service. Veterans formed the basis of the registry because Veterans Administration files provided access to current addresses as well as potential for mortality follow-up. From this roster, a group of twins living within 200 miles of the examining centers and agreeing to cooperate was examined. This procedure yielded a set of 514 pairs of twins where both members of the pair were examined. At the time of initial examination, the World War II veteran twins were 42-56 years old. Since the initial examination, the twins have been followed by the NAS-NRC to maintain current addresses and mortality information.

The World War II veteran cohort was originally examined during the 1969-1973 period at five examination centers located in Framingham, Massachusetts; Davis, San Francisco, Los Angeles, California; and Indianapolis, Indiana. The objective of the initial examination was to estimate the heritability of cardiovascular risk factors. Results of the first examination showed significant heritability for height, weight, relative weight, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, glucose tolerance, uric acid, hematocrit, plasma triglycerides, and forced expiratory volume but not for total plasma cholesterol or any of the lipoprotein cholesterol fractions

.A second exam of the cohort was completed during 1981-1982. Of the original cohort of 1028 subjects, 792 or 77 percent were reexamined and approximately 5.5% had died. The objective of the second examination was to assess the change in cardiovascular risk factors over the ten year interval, assess the disease experience of the cohort and gather additional data on new cardiovascular risk factors as well as pulmonary function measurements and covariates. Examination two differed from examination one in that there was greater opportunity to standardize data collection for methods, laboratories, equipment, and time of examination. Greater emphasis was placed on pulmonary function testing. One objective of examination two that was not achieved was the determination of a sufficient number of cardiovascular events to do analyses of concordance of disease and analyses of disease occurrence in relation to risk factors. Analysis of data on 167 monozygotic pairs of twins and 176 dizygotic pairs of twins showed results similar to those of the first examination for systolic and diastolic blood pressure but, unlike the first examination, also showed significant genetic variance for total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol. HDL cholesterol continued to show no genetic variance.

The third examination of the original cohort was conducted in 1986-1987. The primary objective of the third examination was to assess the incidence of cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases for analyses relative to risk factor data and determine if the heritability of cardiovascular disease exceeded what was expected based on the known cardiovascular risk factors. Extensive pulmonary function testing was part of examination three as it was for examination two and provided longitudinal data for analyses of change in pulmonary function in relation to genetic and environmental factors. The exercise electrocardiogram was expanded to the entire cohort for examination three to provide additional data on sub-clinical disease.

DESIGN NARRATIVE:

The study was longitudinal in design and consisted of three examinations of the cohort over a period of eighteen years. Data collected in examination one in 1969-1973 included: a twin history questionnaire; personal, family and medical histories; a diet history; a physical examination; numerical data on anthropometry, hematology, and pulmonary function; supplemental lab data; an X-ray; clinical diagnostic impression; electrocardiogram; and blood analysis-fasting lipids. Data collected in examination two in 1981-1982 included: a personal and family history; deceased twin information; residence and occupational history; Thurstone Activity Scale; leisure time physical activity; social support; medical history; physical examination; clinical diagnostic impression; job mobility and stress; retirement information; Jenkins Activity Survey; blood lipid measurements. Data collected in examination three in 1986-1987 included the same data as collected in examination two plus an assessment of the prevalence for all twins and the incidence for a subgroup of twins of preclinical cardiovascular disease detected through noninvasive techniques.

The follow-up exam in 1986-87 collected baseline data on cognitive performance in 622 individuals, including 132 monozygotic and 134 dizygotic twin pairs. Beginning in December, 1994, a research grant was used to conduct a fourth exam in the surviving subjects of this cohort that used this rich resource of available data to determine the relationship between cardiovascular risk factors collected over 23 years of follow-up, changes in cognitive function since the last exam, and brain morphology assessed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Given the mean age of this cohort (72 years) in 1995, the next several years represented a critical time to monitor age related changes in brain morphology and cognition. The addition of a fourth exam made the NHLBI Twin Study the longest longitudinal study of cardiovascular disease epidemiology in twin subjects (23 to 25 years of follow-up) and the first to investigate the contribution of genes and the environment to associations between CVD risk factors, cognitive performance, and brain morphology. There were five specific objectives of this study. The first was to evaluate the prospective and cross-sectional relationships of cardiovascular risk factors collected over 23 years of follow-up (e.g., blood pressure, lipids, obesity, smoking) and indices of brain morphology assessed at the fourth exam. The second objective was to determine the extent that twins discordant for essential hypertension or non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) or cardiovascular disease (CHD) showed different MRI profiles. The third was to characterize the neuropsychological changes in performance from Exam 3 to Exam 4 and determine the contribution of genes and the environment to stability or change. The fourth objective was to use the data from exams 1 to 3 to investigate prospective relationships between CVD risk factors and decline in cognitive performance from Exam 3 to Exam 4. The fifth was to determine the heritability of the new measurements obtained for the first time at the fourth examination cycle (e.g., MRI measures of infarct area and localization, white matter hyperintensities (WMHI), and ventricular volumes).

The study completion date listed in this record was obtained from the "End Date" entered in the Protocol Registration and Results System (PRS) record.

Tanulmány típusa

Megfigyelő

Részvételi kritériumok

A kutatók olyan embereket keresnek, akik megfelelnek egy bizonyos leírásnak, az úgynevezett jogosultsági kritériumoknak. Néhány példa ezekre a kritériumokra a személy általános egészségi állapota vagy a korábbi kezelések.

Jogosultsági kritériumok

Tanulmányozható életkorok

Nem régebbi, mint 100 év (Gyermek, Felnőtt, Idősebb felnőtt)

Egészséges önkénteseket fogad

Nem

Tanulmányozható nemek

Férfi

Leírás

No eligibility criteria

Tanulási terv

Ez a rész a vizsgálati terv részleteit tartalmazza, beleértve a vizsgálat megtervezését és a vizsgálat mérését.

Hogyan készül a tanulmány?

Együttműködők és nyomozók

Itt találhatja meg a tanulmányban érintett személyeket és szervezeteket.

Nyomozók

  • Nemat Borhani
  • Dorit Carmelli
  • Margaret Chesney
  • Joe Christian
  • Gary Friedman
  • Marshall Greenberg
  • Clarence Grimm
  • Ray Rosenman
  • Makinodan Takashi

Publikációk és hasznos linkek

A vizsgálattal kapcsolatos információk beviteléért felelős személy önkéntesen bocsátja rendelkezésre ezeket a kiadványokat. Ezek bármiről szólhatnak, ami a tanulmányhoz kapcsolódik.

Tanulmányi rekorddátumok

Ezek a dátumok nyomon követik a ClinicalTrials.gov webhelyre benyújtott vizsgálati rekordok és összefoglaló eredmények benyújtásának folyamatát. A vizsgálati feljegyzéseket és a jelentett eredményeket a Nemzeti Orvostudományi Könyvtár (NLM) felülvizsgálja, hogy megbizonyosodjon arról, hogy megfelelnek-e az adott minőség-ellenőrzési szabványoknak, mielőtt közzéteszik őket a nyilvános weboldalon.

Tanulmány főbb dátumok

Tanulmány kezdete

1969. július 1.

A tanulmány befejezése (Tényleges)

1998. november 1.

Tanulmányi regisztráció dátumai

Először benyújtva

2000. május 25.

Először nyújtották be, amely megfelel a minőségbiztosítási kritériumoknak

2000. május 25.

Első közzététel (Becslés)

2000. május 26.

Tanulmányi rekordok frissítései

Utolsó frissítés közzétéve (Becslés)

2016. március 16.

Az utolsó frissítés elküldve, amely megfelel a minőségbiztosítási kritériumoknak

2016. március 15.

Utolsó ellenőrzés

2000. május 1.

Több információ

A tanulmányhoz kapcsolódó kifejezések

Egyéb vizsgálati azonosító számok

  • 903
  • R01HL051429 (Az Egyesült Államok NIH támogatása/szerződése)

Ezt az információt közvetlenül a clinicaltrials.gov webhelyről szereztük be, változtatás nélkül. Ha bármilyen kérése van vizsgálati adatainak módosítására, eltávolítására vagy frissítésére, kérjük, írjon a következő címre: register@clinicaltrials.gov. Amint a változás bevezetésre kerül a clinicaltrials.gov oldalon, ez a webhelyünkön is automatikusan frissül. .

3
Iratkozz fel