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FRA-STR: Strasbourg/PRIME Study

Contributors from the MPC: Dominique Arveiler Bernadette Haas and Annie Bingham


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© National Institute for Health and Welfare and the MORGAM Project investigators
Last updated: 5 April 2007
For more information, please contact Kari Kuulasmaa (firstname.lastname@thl.fi)

Contents


Cohort identification

Cohort recruitment and the baseline examination

The target was to recruit 2500 men aged 50-59 years. The cohort was recruited to broadly match the social class structure of the background population. The recruitment was based firstly on industry and various employment groups, excluding those with more than 10% of their workforce of foreign origin. Secondly the recruitment was based on health screening centres. This provided the opportunity to recruit unemployed and retired persons to the cohort. 3260 men were contacted, primarily through one health screening centre and occupational medicine, by letter stating the aim of the study and asking to agree to an annual follow-up. 2612 (i.e. 80%) of them agreed to participate.

The baseline examinations were carried out in 1991-1993. The PRIME baseline procedures are described in reference [1].

DNA are available for the members of the Cohort.

End-points followed up

End of follow-up period

Follow-up procedures

Sources of data

Procedure

Each year, on the anniversary of the initial examination, each subject was followed-up by means of a questionnaire sent to his home. Some of the answers to this questionnaire led to further enquiry.

The procedure for contacting the subjects was:

  1. Mail an Annual Follow-up Questionnaire, the letter of introduction and a stamped pre-addressed envelope, on the anniversary of the initial PRIME examination.
  2. Remail if no reply is received within 5 weeks.
  3. If there is still no answer try to make contact by telephone.
  4. If all this fails, contact:
  5. If this is unsuccessful make a home visit and, if necessary, talk to neighbours.
  6. If still no information:
  7. If no answer is obtained, contact the city hall of the town where the subject was born to verify that he is still alive.
  8. If the person is alive, classify him as "lost to follow-up".
  9. After 5 years try to establish if the subject is alive or dead. Write to the city hall of the town where the subject was born.

Whenever there was suspicion of an event, clinical information was sought directly from the hospital or general practitioner notes. All details of electrocardiograms, hospital admissions, enzymes, surgical operations, angioplasty, treatment etc. were collected. Death certificates, which were only available for subjects still living in the Bas-Rhin area at the time of the death, were checked for supporting clinical and post-mortem information on the cause of death. Whenever necessary, the circumstances of death were obtained from the practitioner or the family.

Diagnostic procedures

At baseline:

During follow-up:

References

  1. Yarnell JW. The PRIME study: classical risk factors do not explain the severalfold differences in risk of coronary heart disease between France and Northern Ireland. Prospective Epidemiological Study of Myocardial Infarction. Q J Med. 1998;91:667-76.

Updates to this document

Date Update
2005-04-26 Date of the first published version.
2005-11-18 The description of the coding of "History of coronary heart disease, type unspecified" was corrected.
2007-04-05 The description of the PRIME classification of CHD events and the rule of conversion to the MORGAM diagnostic category was updated. Section "End of follow-up period" was updated.