Authors
Alberto Milanese, Antonio Giampiero Russo
Published in
European journal of preventive cardiology. Jul 10, 2026. Epub Jul 10, 2026.
Abstract
To externally validate and compare CUORE and SCORE2 for 10-year prediction of first fatal or non-fatal myocardial infarction or stroke in an Italian primary care cohort, and to quantify the impact of administrative endpoint definition and model recalibration.
We studied 38,101 adults in ATS Milan (baseline 2007-2009) with primary care risk factors linked to hospital discharge and mortality registries for 10-year follow-up. The endpoint was first fatal or non-fatal myocardial infarction or stroke, ascertained using a strict (primary diagnosis/procedure fields) and a broad (any diagnosis/procedure field) administrative definition. Discrimination was assessed with IPCW time-dependent AUC and calibration with decile plots, calibration-in-the-large and calibration slope, comparing uncalibrated and recalibrated implementations. SCORE2 AUC ranged 0.713-0.720, whereas CUORE ranged 0.730-0.741. Broad ascertainment increased event rates (SCORE2: 5.6% vs 4.4%; CUORE: 6.8% vs 5.0%) without materially changing AUC. SCORE2 showed more stable calibration, whereas CUORE showed calibration slopes <1.
In this real-world Italian cohort, CUORE and SCORE2 provided robust ordinal risk stratification and moderate discrimination at 10 years. Absolute risk estimates were sensitive to administrative endpoint mapping and recalibration strategy, supporting transparent endpoint reporting and local calibration assessment before applying risk thresholds in practice.
PMID:
42429751
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 10 Jul 2026.
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