Cardiovascular correlates of platelet count and volume in the Framingham Heart Study.

2015 
Abstract Purpose Platelet count and volume are inexpensive, routinely assayed biomarkers associated with cardiovascular health, but specific relationships among platelet indices, cardiovascular risk factors, and disease warrant further investigation. The purpose of this study was to understand associations among platelet count, volume, and 20 cardiovascular health–related variables in the Framingham Heart Study (FHS). Methods Cross-sectional analyses were performed on platelet count and volume associations with cardiovascular health indicators in three FHS cohorts (original n  = 964, offspring n  = 2699, and third generation n  = 2419) using multivariate linear regression analysis. Time-to-event analysis was used for cardiovascular disease–related event incidences using Kaplan-Meier plots and Cox proportional hazards regression adjusted for age and sex. Results Results were concordant with the hypothesis that higher platelet counts are associated with less favorable cardiovascular risk profiles, although mean platelet volume associations were weaker. In our analysis, increased platelet count across FHS cohorts was consistently associated with smoking, triglycerides, low-density lipoprotein, and total cholesterol levels. Some associations with platelet count appeared sex dependent. Conclusions Significant associations of common blood platelet measurements are observed with sex and cardiovascular risk factors, namely smoking and lipids. Research is warranted to confirm these relationships in other cohorts, evaluate differences by ethnicity, and examine longitudinal effects on disease risk.
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