% IMPORTANT: The following is UTF-8 encoded. This means that in the presence
% of non-ASCII characters, it will not work with BibTeX 0.99 or older.
% Instead, you should use an up-to-date BibTeX implementation like “bibtex8” or
% “biber”.
@ARTICLE{Jaeschke:154459,
author = {L. Jaeschke and A. Steinbrecher and K. H. Greiser$^*$ and
M. Dörr and T. Buck and J. Linseisen and C. Meisinger and
W. Ahrens and H. Becher and K. Berger and B. Braun and H.
Brenner$^*$ and S. Castell and B. Fischer and C.-W. Franzke
and S. Gastell and K. Günther and W. Hoffmann and B.
Holleczek and A. Jagodzinski and R. Kaaks$^*$ and A. Kluttig
and G. Krause and L. Krist and O. Kuß and A.-T. Lehnich and
M. Leitzmann and W. Lieb and M. Löffler and K. B. Michels
and R. Mikolajczyk and A. Peters and T. Schikowski and S.
Schipf and B. Schmidt and M. Schulze and H. Völzke and S.
N. Willich and T. Pischon},
title = {[{A}ssessment of self-reported cardiovascular and metabolic
diseases in the {G}erman {N}ational {C}ohort ({GNC}, {NAKO}
{G}esundheitsstudie): methods and initial results].},
journal = {Bundesgesundheitsblatt, Gesundheitsforschung,
Gesundheitsschutz},
volume = {63},
number = {4},
issn = {1437-1588},
address = {Heidelberg},
publisher = {Springer},
reportid = {DKFZ-2020-00781},
pages = {439 - 451},
year = {2020},
abstract = {Data on self-reported cardiovascular and metabolic diseases
are available for the first 100,000 participants of the
population-based German National Cohort (GNC, NAKO
Gesundheitsstudie).To describe assessment methods and the
frequency of self-reported cardiovascular and metabolic
diseases in the German National Cohort.Using
a computer-based, standardized personal interview, 101,806
participants (20-75 years, $46\%$ men) from 18 nationwide
study centres were asked to use a predefined list to report
medical conditions ever diagnosed by a physician, including
cardiovascular or metabolic diseases. For the latter, we
calculated sex-stratified relative frequencies and compared
these with reference data.With regard to cardiovascular
diseases, $3.5\%$ of men and $0.8\%$ of women reported to
have ever been diagnosed with a myocardial infarction,
$4.8\%$ and $1.5\%$ with angina pectoris, $3.5\%$ and
$2.5\%$ with heart failure, $10.1\%$ and $10.4\%$ with
cardiac arrhythmia, $2.7\%$ and $1.8\%$ with claudicatio
intermittens, and $34.6\%$ and $27.0\%$ with arterial
hypertension. The frequencies of self-reported diagnosed
metabolic diseases were $8.1\%$ and $5.8\%$ for diabetes
mellitus, $28.6\%$ and $24.5\%$ for hyperlipidaemia, $7.9\%$
and $2.4\%$ for gout, and $10.1\%$ and $34.3\%$ for thyroid
diseases. Observed disease frequencies were lower than
reference data for Germany.In the German National Cohort,
self-reported cardiovascular and metabolic diseases
diagnosed by a physician are assessed from all
participants, therefore representing a data source for
future cardio-metabolic research in this cohort.},
cin = {C020 / C070 / C120},
ddc = {610},
cid = {I:(DE-He78)C020-20160331 / I:(DE-He78)C070-20160331 /
I:(DE-He78)C120-20160331},
pnm = {323 - Metabolic Dysfunction as Risk Factor (POF3-323)},
pid = {G:(DE-HGF)POF3-323},
typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16},
pubmed = {pmid:32157352},
doi = {10.1007/s00103-020-03108-9},
url = {https://inrepo02.dkfz.de/record/154459},
}