Raquel Boix
Instituto de Salud Carlos III
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Environmental Research | 2010
Ma José Medrano; Raquel Boix; Roberto Pastor-Barriuso; Margarita Palau; Javier Damián; Rebeca Ramis; José Luis del Barrio; Ana Navas-Acien
BACKGROUND High-chronic arsenic exposure in drinking water is associated with increased cardiovascular disease risk. At low-chronic levels, as those present in Spain, evidence is scarce. In this ecological study, we evaluated the association of municipal drinking water arsenic concentrations during the period 1998-2002 with cardiovascular mortality in the population of Spain. METHODS Arsenic concentrations in drinking water were available for 1721 municipalities, covering 24.8 million people. Standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) for cardiovascular (361,750 deaths), coronary (113,000 deaths), and cerebrovascular (103,590 deaths) disease were analyzed for the period 1999-2003. Two-level hierarchical Poisson models were used to evaluate the association of municipal drinking water arsenic concentrations with mortality adjusting for social determinants, cardiovascular risk factors, diet, and water characteristics at municipal or provincial level in 651 municipalities (200,376 cardiovascular deaths) with complete covariate information. RESULTS Mean municipal drinking water arsenic concentrations ranged from <1 to 118 microg/L. Compared to the overall Spanish population, sex- and age-adjusted mortality rates for cardiovascular (SMR 1.10), coronary (SMR 1.18), and cerebrovascular (SMR 1.04) disease were increased in municipalities with arsenic concentrations in drinking water > 10 microg/L. Compared to municipalities with arsenic concentrations < 1 microg/L, fully adjusted cardiovascular mortality rates were increased by 2.2% (-0.9% to 5.5%) and 2.6% (-2.0% to 7.5%) in municipalities with arsenic concentrations between 1-10 and >10 microg/L, respectively (P-value for trend 0.032). The corresponding figures were 5.2% (0.8% to 9.8%) and 1.5% (-4.5% to 7.9%) for coronary heart disease mortality, and 0.3% (-4.1% to 4.9%) and 1.7% (-4.9% to 8.8%) for cerebrovascular disease mortality. CONCLUSIONS In this ecological study, elevated low-to-moderate arsenic concentrations in drinking water were associated with increased cardiovascular mortality at the municipal level. Prospective cohort studies with individual measures of arsenic exposure, standardized cardiovascular outcomes, and adequate adjustment for confounders are needed to confirm these ecological findings. Our study, however, reinforces the need to implement arsenic remediation treatments in water supply systems above the World Health Organization safety standard of 10 microg/L.
BMC Neurology | 2009
Jesús de Pedro-Cuesta; Javier Virués-Ortega; Saturio Vega; Manuel Seijo-Martínez; Pedro Saz; Fernanda Rodríguez; Ángel Rodríguez-Laso; Ramón Reñé; Susana Pérez de las Heras; Raimundo Mateos; Pablo Martinez-Martin; José María Manubens; Ignacio Mahillo-Fernandez; Secundino López-Pousa; Antonio Lobo; Jordi Llinàs Reglà; Jordi Gascon; Francisco José García; M. Fernández-Martínez; Raquel Boix; Félix Bermejo-Pareja; Alberto Bergareche; Julián Benito-León; Ana de Arce; José Luis del Barrio
BackgroundThis study describes the prevalence of dementia and major dementia subtypes in Spanish elderly.MethodsWe identified screening surveys, both published and unpublished, in Spanish populations, which fulfilled specific quality criteria and targeted prevalence of dementia in populations aged 70 years and above. Surveys covering 13 geographically different populations were selected (prevalence period: 1990-2008). Authors of original surveys provided methodological details of their studies through a systematic questionnaire and also raw age-specific data. Prevalence data were compared using direct adjustment and logistic regression.ResultsThe reanalyzed study population (aged 70 year and above) was composed of Central and North-Eastern Spanish sub-populations obtained from 9 surveys and totaled 12,232 persons and 1,194 cases of dementia (707 of Alzheimers disease, 238 of vascular dementia). Results showed high variation in age- and sex-specific prevalence across studies. The reanalyzed prevalence of dementia was significantly higher in women; increased with age, particularly for Alzheimers disease; and displayed a significant geographical variation among men. Prevalence was lowest in surveys reporting participation below 85%, studies referred to urban-mixed populations and populations diagnosed by psychiatrists.ConclusionPrevalence of dementia and Alzheimers disease in Central and North-Eastern Spain is higher in females, increases with age, and displays considerable geographic variation that may be method-related. People suffering from dementia and Alzheimers disease in Spain may approach 600,000 and 400,000 respectively. However, existing studies may not be completely appropriate to infer prevalence of dementia and its subtypes in Spain until surveys in Southern Spain are conducted.
Revista Espanola De Cardiologia | 2007
María José Medrano; Roberto Pastor-Barriuso; Raquel Boix; José Luis del Barrio; Javier Damián; Rosa Álvarez; Alejandro Marín
Introduccion y objetivos La carga de enfermedad coronaria atribuible a los factores de riesgo cardiovascular en Espana ha sido extrapolada tradicionalmente de otras poblaciones. Este estudio pretende estimar el riesgo coronario atribuible al tabaquismo, la hipercolesterolemia, la hipertension, la diabetes y el sobrepeso, utilizando datos procedentes de poblaciones Espanolas. Metodos Las prevalencias de los factores de riesgo en la poblacion general se obtuvieron de un metaanalisis de 48 estudios transversales realizados en Espana, y las prevalencias en enfermos coronarios se tomaron de los registros hospitalarios multicentricos PRIAMHO II y PREVESE II. Los riesgos relativos brutos y ajustados de enfermedad coronaria se obtuvieron del seguimiento durante 5 anos de una cohorte de atencion primaria de 6.124 personas adultas libres de enfermedad cardiovascular. Las fracciones atribuibles brutas y ajustadas se calcularon para ambos sexos y para varones y mujeres por separado. Resultados En los varones, el 42,5% (intervalo de confianza [IC] del 95%, 6,8%-59,6%) de la incidencia ajustada de enfermedad coronaria se atribuyo al sobrepeso; el 33,9% (IC del 95%, 22,6%-41%), al tabaquismo, el 19,4% (IC del 95%, 8,2%-26,5%), a la hipercolesterolemia, y el 15,5% (IC del 95%, 1,6%-24,6%), a la hipertension. En las mujeres, el 36,5% (IC del 95%, –8%-56,3%) de los casos de cardiopatia isquemica se atribuyeron al sobrepeso, el 24,8% (IC del 95%, 12%-31,9%), a la diabetes y el 20,1% (IC del 95%, 6,1%-28,6%), a la hipercolesterolemia. Conclusiones El sobrepeso y el tabaquismo en varones son los factores de riesgo cardiovascular a los que cabe atribuir un mayor impacto poblacional en la enfermedad coronaria.
BMC Public Health | 2006
Alejandro Marín; María José Medrano; José Luis Galán González; Héctor Pintado; Vicente Compaired; Mario Bárcena; María Victoria Fustero; Javier Tisaire; José M Cucalón; A. Martín; Raquel Boix; Francisco Hernansanz; José Carlos Casillas Bueno
BackgroundIschaemic heart disease is a global priority of health-care policy, because of its social repercussions and its impact on the health-care system. Yet there is little information on coronary morbidity in Spain and on the effect of the principal risk factors on risk of coronary heart disease. The objective of this study is to describe the epidemiology of coronary disease (incidence, mortality and its association with cardiovascular risk factors) using the information gathered by primary care practitioners on cardiovascular health of their population.MethodsA prospective study was designed. Eight primary-care centres participated, each contributing to the constitution of the cohort with the entire population covered by the centre. A total of 6124 men and women aged over 25 years and free of cardiovascular disease agreed to participate and were thus enrolled and followed-up, with all fatal and non-fatal coronary disease episodes being registered during a 5-year period. Repeated measurements were collected on smoking, blood pressure, weight and height, serum total cholesterol, high-density and low-density lipoproteins and fasting glucose. Rates were calculated for acute myocardial infarction and ischaemic heart disease. Associations between cardiovascular risk factors and coronary disease-free survival were evaluated using Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression analyses.ResultsMean age at recruitment was 51.6 ± 15, with 24% of patients being over 65. At baseline, 74% of patients were overweight, serum cholesterol over 240 was present in 35% of patients, arterial hypertension in 37%, and basal glucose over 126 in 11%. Thirty-four percent of men and 13% of women were current smokers. During follow-up, 155 first episodes of coronary disease were detected, which yielded age-adjusted rates of 362 and 191 per 100,000 person-years in men and women respectively. Disease-free survival was associated with all risk factors in univariate analyses. After multivariate adjustments, age, male gender, smoking, high total cholesterol, high HDL/LDL ratio, diabetes and overweight remained strongly associated with risk. Relative risks for hypertension in women and for diabetes in men did not reach statistical significance.ConclusionDespite high prevalence of vascular risk factors, incidence rates were lower than those reported for other countries and other periods, but similar to those reported in the few population-based studies in Spain. Effect measures of vascular risk factors were mainly as reported worldwide and support the hypothesis that protective factors not considered in this study must exist as to explain low rates. This study shows the feasibility of conducting epidemiological cohort studies in primary-care settings.
BMJ Open | 2013
Iñaki Galán; Raquel Boix; María José Medrano; Pilar Ramos; Francisco Rivera; Roberto Pastor-Barriuso; Carmen Moreno
Objectives Little is known about the dose–response relationship between physical activity and health benefits among young people. Our objective was to analyse the association between the frequency of undertaking moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) and the self-reported health status of the adolescent population. Design Cross-sectional study. Setting All regions of Spain. Participants Students aged 11–18 years participating in the Spanish Health Behaviour in School-aged Children survey 2006. A total of 375 schools and 21 188 students were selected. Main outcomes The frequency of undertaking MVPA was measured by a questionnaire, with the following four health indicators: self-rated health, health complaints, satisfaction with life and health-related quality of life. Linear and logistic regression models were used to analyse the association, adjusting for potential confounding variables and the modelling of the dose–response relationship. Results As the frequency of MVPA increased, the association with health benefits was stronger. A linear trend (p<0.05) was found for self-rated health and health complaints in males and females and for satisfaction with life among females; for health-related quality of life this relationship was quadratic for both sexes (p<0.05). For self-reported health and health complaints, the effect was found to be of greater magnitude in males than in females and, in all scales, the benefits were observed from the lowest frequencies of MVPA, especially in males. Conclusions A protective effect of MVPA was found in both sexes for the four health indicators studied, and this activity had a gradient effect. Among males, health benefits were detected from very low levels of physical activity and the magnitude of the relationship was greater than that for females.
Neuroepidemiology | 2005
José Luis del Barrio; Jesús de Pedro-Cuesta; Raquel Boix; Jesús Acosta; Alberto Bergareche; Félix Bermejo-Pareja; Rafael Gabriel; María Jesús García de Yébenes; Francisco José García; Secundino López-Pousa; José María Manubens; Raimundo Mateos; Jordi Matías-Guiu; Josep María Olivé; Ramón Reñé; Fernanda Rodríguez; Pedro Saz
We identified 14 door-to-door prevalence surveys on dementia, parkinsonism or stroke in Spanish populations fulfilling specific criteria and combined selected age- and sex-specific data using logistic regression and taking Pamplona as a reference. The prevalence of dementia and of Alzheimer’s disease varied significantly with space. However, the largest variation was seen for vascular dementia: odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) for Gerona were 6.42 (3.23–12.3) in women and 2.30 (1.10–4.79) in men. Stroke was particularly frequent among Arevalo’s women, with OR 2.10 and 95% CI 1.26–3.49. The prevalence of Parkinson’s disease was twofold higher in Cantalejo. Although differences in methodology make the interpretation of results problematic, the prevalence of stroke and vascular dementia in Spain seems to vary spatially, indicating a space for prevention.
BMC Neurology | 2006
Raquel Boix; José Luis del Barrio; Pedro Saz; Ramón Reñé; José María Manubens; Antonio Lobo; Jordi Gascon; Ana de Arce; Jaime Díaz-Guzmán; Alberto Bergareche; Félix Bermejo-Pareja; Jesús de Pedro-Cuesta
BackgroundThis study sought to describe stroke prevalence in Spanish elderly populations and compare it against that of other European countries.MethodsWe identified screening surveys -both published and unpublished- in Spanish populations, which fulfilled specific quality requirements and targeted prevalence of stroke in populations aged 70 years and over. Surveys covering seven geographically different populations with prevalence years in the period 1991–2002 were selected, and the respective authors were then asked to provide descriptions of the methodology and raw age-specific data by completing a questionnaire. In addition, five reported screening surveys in European populations furnished useful data for comparison purposes. Prevalence data were combined, using direct adjustment and logistic regression.ResultsThe overall study population, resident in central and north-eastern Spain, totalled 10,647 persons and yielded 715 cases. Age-adjusted prevalences, using the European standard population, were 7.3% for men, 5.6% for women, and 6.4% for both sexes. Prevalence was significantly lower in women, OR 0.79 95% CI 0.68–0.93, increased with age, particularly among women, and displayed a threefold spatial variation with statistically significant differences. Prevalences were highest, 8.7%, in suburban, and lowest, 3.8%, in rural populations. Compared to pooled Spanish populations, statistically significant differences were seen in eight Italian populations, OR 1.39 95%CI (1.18–1.64), and in Kungsholmen, Sweden, OR 0.40 95%CI (0.27–0.58).ConclusionPrevalence in central and north-eastern Spain is higher in males and in suburban areas, and displays a threefold geographic variation, with women constituting the majority of elderly stroke sufferers. Compared to reported European data, stroke prevalence in Spain can be said to be medium and presents similar age- and sex-specific traits.
Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2011
Alberto Villarejo; Julián Benito-León; Rocío Trincado; Ignacio J. Posada; Verónica Puertas-Martín; Raquel Boix; M
To evaluate the mortality, thirteen years after the baseline wave (1994), of participants suffering dementia in the Neurological Disorders in Central Spain (NEDICES) Cohort Study, we conducted a population-based cohort study in the elderly (65 years and more) with 5,278 screened participants at baseline. Mortality has been evaluated by means of the National Death Registry of Spain at 1-5-2007, 13 years after enrolment. Coxs proportional hazards regression models were used to evaluate the hazard of death according to dementia severity and type, adjusting for potential covariates (gender, age, level of education, and co-morbidity). Survival was estimated using Kaplan-Meier method. Of the 5,278 participants screened at baseline, 306 had dementia. Mortality at 13 years was: 275 deaths (89.9%) in dementia subjects; and 2,426 (49.0%) in subjects without dementia. Mortality was higher and statistically significant in dementia subjects. The degree of dementia (DSM-III-R) correlated with the risk of mortality, from mild (HR = 2.23; CI: 1.77-2.82) to moderate (HR =3.10; CI: 2.47-3.89) and severe dementia (HR = 4.98; CI: 3.85-6.44). Survival was similar in Alzheimers disease and vascular dementia. Factors associated with higher mortality in Cox proportional hazard models were older age, male gender, and comorbidity. Using Population Attributable risk (PAR%), dementia was related to 11.3% of all deaths. Dementia intensity increases the mortality risk at ten years in the NEDICES Study as in other cohort studies. Age, gender, and co-morbidity are associated with higher mortality in dementia patients. Almost one third of deaths in persons over 85 years-old could be attributable to dementia.
Acta Neurologica Scandinavica | 2011
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Virués‐Ortega J, de Pedro‐Cuesta J, Vega S, Seijo‐Martínez M, Saz P, Rodríguez F, Rodríguez‐Laso Á, Reñé R, de las Heras SP, Mateos R, Martínez‐Martín P, Mahillo‐Fernández I, López‐Pousa S, Lobo A, Reglà JL, Gascón J, García FJ, Fernández‐Martínez M, Boix R, Bermejo‐Pareja F, Bergareche A, Sánchez‐Sánchez F, de Arce A, del Barrio JL; On behalf of the Spanish Epidemiological Studies on Ageing Group. Prevalence and European comparison of dementia in a ≥75‐year‐old composite population in Spain. Acta Neurol Scand: 2011: 123: 316–324. © 2010 John Wiley & Sons A/S.
International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2011
José Medrano; Félix Bermejo-Pareja
To evaluate whether memory impairment detected in the three‐word delayed recall task of the Mini‐Mental State Examination (MMSE) increases the risk of mortality.