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B Joung, P.S Yang, J.H Sung, E.S Jang, H.T Yu, T.H Kim, J.S Uhm, J.Y Kim, H.N Pak, M.H Lee, Benefit of high cardiovascular health for incident cardiovascular events and mortality in elderly population, European Heart Journal, Volume 41, Issue Supplement_2, November 2020, ehaa946.2908, https://doi.org/10.1093/ehjci/ehaa946.2908
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Abstract
There is consistent evidence of the association between ideal cardiovascular health and lower incident cardiovascular disease (CVD); however, most studies used a single measure of cardiovascular health.
To examine the association of change in cardiovascular health with subsequent incident CVD and mortality in elderly population.
In the Korea National Health Insurance Service-Senior (≥60 years) cohort, 312,736 participants who received national health check-ups between 2005–2012 were assessed for eligibility. Using the 7metrics of the American Heart Association (nonsmoking; and ideal levels of body mass index, physical activity, diet, blood pressure, fasting blood glucose, and total cholesterol), participants with 0 to 2, 3 to 4, and 5 to 7 ideal metrics were categorized as having low, moderate, and high cardiovascular health. Change in cardiovascular health over 2 years between 2005 and 2006 was considered.
The study population included 162,149 participants without prior CVD or malignancy (median age at baseline, 69 [IQR 66–73] years; 91,408 [56.2%] women), of whom 59,887 had data about cardiovascular health change. Over a median follow-up of 5.8 (5.5–8.0) years, 5346 incident CVD events and 6035 death occurred. In multivariable analysis and compared with individuals with persistently low cardiovascular health (consistently low group, 7.9% of participants; CVD incident rate per 1000 person-years, 21.1 [95% CI, 19.4–23.0]), a lower CVD risk was observed in the consistently moderate group (38.7% of participants; absolute rate difference per 1000 person-years, −4.8 [95% CI, −5.5 to −4.1]; HR, 0.77 [95% CI, 0.70–0.85]), the moderate to high group (11.6% of participants; absolute rate difference per 1000 person-years, −7.7 [95% CI, −8.8 to −5.5]; HR, 0.62 [95% CI, 0.55–0.70]), the high to moderate group (11.2% of participants; absolute rate difference per 1000 person-years, −7.2 [95% CI, −8.3 to −5.9]; HR, 0.64 [95% CI, 0.56–0.72]), and the consistently high group (11.3% of participants; absolute rate difference per 1000 person-years, −10.2 [95% CI, −11.2 to −9.1]; HR, 0.51 [95% CI, 0.44–0.58]). A lower mortality risk was observed in the consistently moderate group, the moderate to high group, and the high to moderate or high groups.
Among a group of elderly participants without CVD, there was benefit of moderate or high cardiovascular health for incident cardiovascular events and mortality.
Type of funding source: None
- physical activity
- body mass index procedure
- cardiovascular diseases
- heart disease risk factors
- blood pressure
- cancer
- diet
- health evaluation
- american heart association
- cardiovascular system
- follow-up
- health insurance
- korea
- fasting blood glucose measurement
- mortality
- older adult
- cardiovascular event
- total cholesterol
- prevention