Does cumulative exposure to multiple risk factors over time increase the risk of incident cardiovascular disease in asymptomatic young adults?
4,958 asymptomatic adults enrolled in CARDIA from 1985 to 1986 (ages 18 to 30 years)
Cumulative exposure over time to multiple, simultaneously operating risk factors (low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglycerides, mean arterial pressure, pulse pressure)
Incident cardiovascular disease (CVD) and the incidence of its components: coronary heart disease, stroke, and congestive heart failurehard clinical
Cumulative lifetime exposure to multiple risk factors, including lipids and blood pressure, starting from young adulthood is independently associated with incident cardiovascular disease.
BACKGROUND The quantitative relationship of incident cardiovascular disease (CVD) to lifetime cumulative risk factor exposure is not well understood. OBJECTIVES Using CARDIA (Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults) study data, we examined the quantitative associations of cumulative exposure over time to multiple, simultaneously operating risk factors with CVD incidence and the incidence of its components. METHODS Regression models were developed quantifying the influence of the time course and severity of multiple CVD risk factors, operating simultaneously, on risk of incident CVD. The outcomes were incident CVD and the incidence of its components: coronary heart disease, stroke, and congestive heart failure. RESULTS Our study included 4,958 asymptomatic adults enrolled in CARDIA from 1985 to 1986 (ages 18 to 30 years) who were followed for 30 years. Risk of incident CVD depends on the time course and severity of a series of independent risk factors, the impact of which is mediated by their effects on individual CVD components after age 40 years. Cumulative exposure (AUC vs time) to low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides was independently associated with risk of incident CVD. Of the blood pressure variables, areas under the mean arterial pressure vs time curve and the pulse pressure vs time curve were strongly and independently associated with incident CVD risk. CONCLUSIONS The quantitative description of the link between risk factors and CVD informs the construction of individualized CVD mitigation strategies, design of primary prevention trials, and assessment of public health impact of risk factor-based interventions.
“In the absence of randomized trial data in younger and middle-aged adults with low 10–30 year risk, the role of additional risk stratification tools—such as hsCRP and coronary artery calcium scoring—becomes critical in guiding individualized decisions about when to begin lipid-lowering pharmacoth...”
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Michaël Domanski
Heart Failure & Transplant
Colin O. Wu
Cardiac Imaging
Xin Tian
Sun Yat-sen University
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
National Institutes of Health
University of Toronto
University of Minnesota
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Domanski et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69fab33cbe8db92247453665 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacc.2023.01.024
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