Due to inclusion criteria within single examinations, measurements that had to be excluded during quality control and different examination programs, the number of valid observations varies between examinations (Table 1).
3.1: Table 1: List of examinations, the respective program and sample size
Investigation
|
Program
|
Sample size
|
Body height
|
basic
|
10050
|
Body weight
|
basic
|
10050
|
Abdominal circumference
|
basic
|
10027
|
Bioelectrical impedance analysis
|
extended
|
2387
|
Dexa-Scan
|
extended
|
1595
|
Blood pressure
|
basic
|
10041
|
Electrocardiography
|
basic
|
10055
|
Ankle–brachial pressure index
|
extended
|
2423
|
24 h blood pressure
|
extended
|
1291
|
Coronary Artery Calcium Score
|
extended
|
1750
|
Pulmonary function
|
extended
|
1812
|
Liver stiffness measurement
|
extended
|
754
|
5-point OGTT (with insulin)
|
extended
|
2151
|
Medical & family history, medication
|
basic
|
9987
|
ODQ-D
|
basic
|
9476
|
WOMAC
|
basic
|
9476
|
Austrian Social Insurance Inventory
|
basic
|
9476
|
US carotid artery
|
basic
|
9968
|
Salzburg Dementia Prediction Test
|
basic
|
7096
|
Questions on psychological disorders*
|
basic
|
9390
|
BDI
|
basic
|
9476
|
BIS-15
|
basic
|
9476
|
Accelerometry
|
extended
|
1605
|
IPAQ
|
extended
|
1324
|
Questions on exercise **
|
basic
|
9476
|
CPET
|
extended
|
1416
|
Walking Test
|
extended
|
1057
|
Hand Grip Test
|
extended
|
1055
|
AUDIT
|
basic
|
9476
|
EPIC Inventory
|
basic
|
8191
|
QoL F-12
|
basic
|
9476
|
Seven day diet survey
|
extended
|
1208
|
ESS
|
basic
|
9476
|
Further inventories on lifestyle ***
|
basic
|
9476
|
Questions on allergies
|
basic
|
8666
|
Inventory on Mediterranean diet
|
basic
|
9231
|
* includes: questions on major depressive disorder, bulimia and anorexia nervosa, generalized anxiety disorder, manic and hypomanic episodes, panic disorder, agoraphobia, social phobia, obsessive-compulsive disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, substance and alcohol abuse.
** regular exercise in different phases of life recorded in the self-assessed inventory.
*** includes: questions on origin and family background, religion, employment, education, domestic circumstances, smoking habits, menopause, Mediterranean diet, allergies and sexuality were included. Further, questions were added on usage of mobile phone, sensitivity towards chemical smells, electromagnetic pollution, air and noise pollution.
OGTT: Oral glucose tolerance test
ODQ-D: Oswestry Low Back Pain Disability
WOMAC: Western Ontario and McMaster Osteoarthritis Index
US: Ultra sound
BDI: Beck Depression Inventory
BIS: Barrat Impulsiveness Scale
IPAQ: International Physical Activity Questionnaire
CPET: Cardiopulmonary exercise testing
AUDIT: Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test
EPIC: European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition
QoL: Quality of Life
ESS: Epworth-Sleepiness-Scale
3.2. Demographic characteristics of the cohort
The gender distribution in the study cohort shows a balanced plotting between women (51.6%) and men (48.4%), while in the population of the country of Salzburg and whole Austria show a distribution of 51.6% and 50.7% women respectively. The study cohort differs in age distribution from the two reference populations: Due to the study design participants between 40 and 44 years are underrepresented, while participants between 50 and 59 are overrepresented (Fig. 2). Compared to the Salzburg and Austrian population, our cohort is composed slightly of more individuals with Austrian citizenship and no migration background (Fig. 3).
Figure 4 shows an overrepresentation of individuals with higher education level and underrepresentation of individuals with lower education levels in the study cohort compared to the reference groups. Educational level was categorized according to the International Standard Classification of Education (ISCED) [39]. Consequently, more study participants are working as employees and fewer as workers compared to Salzburg and Austrian inhabitants (Fig. 5).
The Salzburg and Austrian population are much more likely to live in rurally urbanized regions, while the greatest part of our cohort is living in densely and intermediately urbanized regions (Fig. 6). Due to this divergence, the parameters education, employment and migration background were additionally investigated with regard to three urbanization degrees, exploring possible relations. There is no difference of trends between the data of employment type and education degree split up in the three urbanization groups (fig. S1 and S2) and all groups put together (Figs. 4 and 5). For details, see supplementary material. In the comparison of the data regarding migration background, the distribution of study participants with first and second generation migration and without migration background living in a rural area approaches the data of the reference groups. The distribution in the study cohort stays constant through out the urbanization degrees, the ones of the reference groups vary with increasing percentage of people without migration background in rural areas compared to urban regions (see supplementary material).
3.3 Life style: Exercise and Smoking
Figure 7 shows a smaller proportion of people who smoke in the study cohort compared to the Austrian and Salzburg population, who additionally conduct more moderate and intense exercise in minutes per week than the study participants (Fig. 8).
3.4 Data on health parameters in the cohort
Table 2: Distribution of anthropometric data, lipid metabolism, glucose metabolism, kidney function and blood pressure in the study cohort, split up into women and men. The 5th and 95th percentile, first and third quartile and median and mean, as well as the standard deviation of data are displayed.
BMI: Body Mass Index, LDL: Low-density Lipid, HDL: High-density Lipid, HOMA-IR: Homeostasis Model Assessment for Insulin Resistance, eGFR: epidermal Growth Factor Receptor.