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Table 4 Relationship between TC/HDL-C ratio and stroke risk in different sensitivity analyses

From: A non-linear connection between the total cholesterol to high-density lipoprotein cholesterol ratio and stroke risk: a retrospective cohort study from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study

Exposure

Model 4 (HR, 95%CI, P)

Model 5 (HR, 95%CI, P)

TC/HDL-C ratio (per 1 increase)

1.07 (1.00, 1.13) 0.0433

1.09 (1.03, 1.15) 0.0036

TC/HDL-C ratio (quartile)

 Q1

Ref

Ref

 Q2

1.26 (1.01, 1.57) 0.0446

1.28 (1.02, 1.61) 0.0328

 Q3

1.23 (0.98, 1.55) 0.0695

1.35 (1.07, 1.69) 0.0107

 Q4

1.28 (1.01, 1.63) 0.0399

1.45 (1.15, 1.83) 0.0015

P for trend

0.0582

0.0023

  1. Model 4 was sensitivity analysis in participants without hypertension. We adjusted for age, gender, educational attainment, annual income, smoking status, drinking status, physical activity, BMI, CHD, CLD, Liver disease, CRP, WBC, Scr, Cystatin C, hemoglobin, FPG, HbA1c, lipid-lowering medication, antihypertensive medication, and glucose-lowering medication
  2. Model 5 was sensitivity analysis in participants without CHD. We adjusted for age, gender, educational attainment, annual income, smoking status, drinking status, physical activity, BMI, CLD, liver disease, CRP, WBC, Scr, Cystatin C, hemoglobin, FPG, HbA1c, lipid-lowering medication, antihypertensive medication, and glucose-lowering medication
  3. HR hazard ratios, CI confidence, Ref reference, TC/HDL-C ratio total cholesterol to high-density lipoprotein cholesterol ratio