Health professionals
"Absolute cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk assessment is a simple tool that can enhance your clinical judgement, and improve your ability to educate and motivate patients. Single risk factors (like cholesterol level) provide a poor estimate of a patient's CVD risk. Absolute CVD risk assessment provides a more accurate estimate of overall, individualised CVD risk, thereby allowing the clinician to best tailor pharmaceutical and lifestyle management to the patient."
–Professor Mark Harris, Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, University of New South Wales.
The probability that an individual will develop CVD within a given period of time depends on the combination and intensity of all their identified risk factors, rather than on the presence of any single risk factor. Using an absolute risk approach takes into account the cumulative and sometimes synergistic effects of these multiple risk factors. Clinical decisions based on absolute CVD risk levels can lead to improved health outcomes, because they direct the right treatments to those who can benefit most. The absolute risk approach is emphasised by several Australian and international primary care guidelines, and supported by robust evidence.
Absolute CVD risk assessment, using the Framingham Risk Equation (FRE) to predict risk of a cardiovascular event over the next five years, should be performed for all adults aged 45 and older (or 30 years and older for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples) without existing CVD or not already known to be at increased risk of CVD (see Box 1 below).
For specific population groups, additional recommendations include
Adults with any of the conditions below are already known to be at increased absolute risk of CVD and do not require further assessment using the FRE.
Box 1. Adults already known to be at increased risk of CVD
To make a full assessment of your patient's absolute cardiovascular risk, you will need to take into consideration the following factors:
For more detailed information, refer to the full NVDPA Guidelines for the management of absolute cardiovascular disease risk and the Quick reference guide, which includes an assessment algorithm and coloured risk charts. You can find links to these and other resources on the Resources page.
* Some recommendations were derived from the systematic review, while others are consensus statements developed where the systematic literature review process was undertaken, but no evidence was found for or against the recommendation. For details see NVDPA's Guidelines for the assessment of absolute CVD risk.
** Refer to National Heart Foundation of Australia's information sheet Familial hypercholesterolaemia: information for doctors.
† Risk parameters that are included in the absolute risk calculator, based on the FRE.
†† Alcohol is a risk factor for elevated blood pressure (which is itself a major independent determinant of risk of atherosclerotic disease), stroke and cardiomyopathy. For a full discussion of this, please see the National Health and Medical Research Council's (NHMRC) Australian guidelines to reduce health risks from drinking alcohol.
‡ Risk assessment requires consideration of socioeconomic deprivation as an independent risk factor for CVD. Absolute cardiovascular risk calculated using the FRE is likely to underestimate cardiovascular risk in socioeconomically deprived groups.
The National Vascular Disease Prevention Alliance and its work has been incorporated into the Australian Chronic Disease Prevention Alliance (ACDPA). All activities are being continued under
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