for eMaxHealthUsing data collected from over 24,000 initially healthy American women, researchers from Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) have devised a new Web-based formula called the Reynolds Risk Score, that for the first time more accurately predicts risk of heart attack or stroke among women.
In addition to usual risk factors like cholesterol, blood pressure, and smoking, the new Reynolds Risk Score adds information on two new factors, family history of heart attack prior to age 60 and blood level of C-reactive protein (CRP), a measure of artery inflammation. Using the new risk assessment tool, the researchers found that nearly 50 percent of women in the study who were estimated to be at "intermediate risk" for heart attack or stroke based on current guidelines were in fact at significantly higher or lower risk levels.
For the 10 million American women currently classified at "intermediate risk," use of the Reynolds Risk Score provides doctors and their patients a much clearer picture of who should or should not receive drug therapies such as statins or aspirin, and highlights the critical impact that can be made on heart disease prevention by diet, exercise, and smoking cessation. The findings appear in the February 14, 2007 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association and are available in a user-friendly format for both physicians and their patients at www.ReynoldsRiskScore.org