Framingham Risk Score for Hard Coronary Heart Disease

Framingham Risk Score for Hard Coronary

Estimates 10-year risk of coronary heart disease events

Framingham Risk Score for Hard Coronary Heart Disease

Framingham Risk Score for Hard Coronary

Estimates 10-year risk of coronary heart disease events

Sex
Age
Total Cholesterol (mg/dL)
HDL Cholesterol (mg/dL)
Systolic Blood Pressure (mmHg)
Treated for Hypertension
Current Smoker
Framingham Risk (Hard CHD): Not all parameters selected
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Average 10-year risk

Instructions

Collect patient data: age, sex, total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, systolic blood pressure (and whether treated for hypertension), smoking status, and diabetes status. Assign point values based on the Framingham point chart for each variable. Sum the points to determine the patient’s 10-year risk of developing “hard” CHD (myocardial infarction or CHD death).

Interpret results according to the corresponding risk category: low, intermediate, or high. Use the score in conjunction with clinical judgment and other risk assessment tools when making treatment decisions.

Overview
When to use
Why use
Evidences

Interpretation

10-Year CHD Risk by Age and Sex

Age Group

Men (%)

Women (%)

30-34

<1

<1

35-39

1

<1

40-44

2

1

45-49

5

2

50-54

8

3

55-59

12

4

60-64

16

5

65-69

20

8

70-74

25

11

 

  • The Framingham hard CHD function (coronary death or nonfatal MI) underpins ATP III risk assessment, with variables including age, total cholesterol, HDL-C, systolic blood pressure (treated/untreated), smoking, and diabetes, modeled via Cox regression to estimate 10-year risk.

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3673738/


  • ATP III formally adopted hard CHD as the endpoint for 10-year risk classification and provided sex-specific tables approximating the equations, while recommending electronic calculators for precise continuous-variable computation.

    https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/circ.106.25.3227


  • Subsequent Framingham work expanded to general CVD risk profiles, but confirmed that hard CHD functions remain valid for coronary-focused prevention strategies in primary care settings.

    https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/circulationaha.107.699579

Overview
When to use
Why use
Evidences

The Framingham Risk Score for Hard Coronary Heart Disease is a validated clinical tool that estimates a patient’s 10-year probability of experiencing a major coronary event, such as myocardial infarction or death due to coronary heart disease. It was derived from the long-running Framingham Heart Study, which has tracked cardiovascular health outcomes in multiple generations of participants since 1948.

Unlike general cardiovascular risk scores, this version specifically focuses on “hard” CHD events, providing a sharper assessment for high-impact outcomes. The score incorporates multiple well-established risk factors like age, sex, cholesterol levels, blood pressure, smoking status, and diabetes, assigning each a point value that reflects its relative contribution to risk.

The Framingham Risk Score is widely used to guide preventive strategies, such as initiating statin therapy, recommending blood pressure control, and advising smoking cessation. It supports shared decision-making between clinicians and patients by presenting risk in clear numerical and percentage terms. While powerful, the score is population-based and may require adjustment for certain ethnic groups or individuals with atypical risk profiles. Nonetheless, it remains a cornerstone of preventive cardiology and is included in many major clinical guidelines worldwide.

Overview
When to use
Why use
Evidences

Interpretation

10-Year CHD Risk by Age and Sex

Age Group

Men (%)

Women (%)

30-34

<1

<1

35-39

1

<1

40-44

2

1

45-49

5

2

50-54

8

3

55-59

12

4

60-64

16

5

65-69

20

8

70-74

25

11

 

  • The Framingham hard CHD function (coronary death or nonfatal MI) underpins ATP III risk assessment, with variables including age, total cholesterol, HDL-C, systolic blood pressure (treated/untreated), smoking, and diabetes, modeled via Cox regression to estimate 10-year risk.

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3673738/


  • ATP III formally adopted hard CHD as the endpoint for 10-year risk classification and provided sex-specific tables approximating the equations, while recommending electronic calculators for precise continuous-variable computation.

    https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/circ.106.25.3227


  • Subsequent Framingham work expanded to general CVD risk profiles, but confirmed that hard CHD functions remain valid for coronary-focused prevention strategies in primary care settings.

    https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/circulationaha.107.699579

Frequently Asked Questions

Features and Services FAQs

Discover the full range of features and services we offer and how to use them.

What does “hard” coronary heart disease mean in this score?+
Can the Framingham score be used in patients over 75?+
How accurate is the Framingham Risk Score?+
Do I need a fasting cholesterol panel to calculate the score?+
Can the score be used if the patient already has heart disease?+
Is smoking status weighted heavily in the score?+

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AI-powered medical documentation platform revolutionizing clinical workflows through intelligent patient management and secure documentation.

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AI-powered medical documentation platform revolutionizing clinical workflows through intelligent patient management and secure documentation.

© 2025 DocScrib. All rights reserved.