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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2014 Feb 15.
Published in final edited form as: Am J Cardiol. 2012 Dec 4;111(4):540–546. doi: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2012.10.039

Table 2.

Cox proportional hazards models - snoring and incident cardiovascular disease among Women’s Health Initiative study participants (N=42,244)§

Snoring frequency Model adjusted for age, race Model fully adjusted
Cases Person-years HR 95% CI P-value HR 95% CI P-value

CHD* Frequent 609 86,227 1.54 1.39, 1.70 <0.001 1.14 1.01, 1.28 0.038
Occasional 814 143,209 1.27 1.16, 1.39 <0.001 1.12 1.01, 1.24 0.032
None (referent) 978 208,454 1.00 REF REF 1.00 REF REF

CVD Frequent 790 84,671 1.46 1.34, 1.60 <0.001 1.12 1.01, 1.24 0.031
Occasional 1103 141,122 1.25 1.16, 1.36 <0.001 1.11 1.01, 1.21 0.026
None (referent) 1354 205,547 1.00 REF REF 1.00 REF REF

Ischemic Stroke Frequent 232 95,307 1.41 1.19, 1.66 <0.001 1.19 1.02, 1.40 0.030
Occasional 349 153,389 1.29 1.11, 1.50 <0.001 1.15 0.96, 1.38 0.140
None (referent) 412 220,697 1.00 REF REF 1.00 REF REF
*

Total CHD outcome includes MI, CHD death, PTCA, CABG, or hospitalized angina

CVD outcome includes MI, CHD death, PTCA, CABG, hospitalized angina, or ischemic stroke

Model adjusted for age, race, education, income, smoking, physical activity, alcohol intake, depression, diabetes, high blood pressure, BMI, WHR, hyperlipidemia

§

All analyses conducted among disease-free cohort and total N’s reflect this difference by outcome