Age-stratified comparison of heart age and predicted cardiovascular risk in 370 000 primary care patients.

IF 5.1 2区 医学 Q1 CARDIAC & CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEMS Heart Pub Date : 2025-01-29 DOI:10.1136/heartjnl-2024-324156
Kathrine Stjernholm, Andrew Kerr, Katrina K Poppe, Anders Elkær Jensen, Suneela Mehta, Jesper Bo Nielsen, Rod Jackson, Susan Wells
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Abstract

Background: Cardiovascular disease (CVD) preventive medications are recommended for patients at high short-term CVD risk. As most younger people with multiple raised CVD risk factors levels have low short-term risk, they could be falsely reassured to take no action. Heart age-the chronological age of a hypothetical person with the same short-term absolute CVD risk as the patient being assessed, but with an 'ideal' risk profile-is a complementary relative CVD risk metric developed to encourage these younger patients to make long-term lifestyle changes. However, clinicians sometimes use heart age to inform medication decisions. We assessed the appropriateness of this practice by comparing heart age and short-term CVD risk.

Methods: New Zealand primary care patients are recruited to the PREDICT cohort when their CVD risk is assessed. PREDICT is an ongoing prospective study in one-third of New Zealand general practices, designed to derive CVD risk prediction algorithms. Five-year CVD risk was calculated for 35-74-year-old PREDICT participants using published equations. Heart age was calculated using non-smoking, systolic blood pressure of 120 mm Hg and total cholesterol/high-density lipoprotein ratio of 3.5, as the 'ideal' risk profile. CVD risk and heart age gaps (difference between chronological age and heart age) were compared.

Results: Among 371 676 PREDICT participants, 5-year CVD risk increased with age, approximately doubling every 10 years, whereas heart age gaps decreased with increasing age, approximately halving between 35 and 44-year olds and 65-74-year olds. There were 5-40-year heart age gap differences between groups with similar 5-year CVD risks, but different ages.

Conclusion: Short-term CVD risk and heart age are not interchangeable risk metrics. Short-term risk increases with increasing age whereas heart age gaps generally decline, with major differences between younger and older people with similar short-term risk. If heart age is used to inform medication decisions rather than encourage long-term lifestyle changes, older people at high short-term risk could be undertreated and younger people at low short-term risk could be unnecessarily medicated.

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37万名初级保健患者心脏年龄和预测心血管风险的年龄分层比较
背景:心血管疾病(CVD)预防药物被推荐用于短期CVD高风险患者。由于大多数患有多种心血管疾病风险因素水平升高的年轻人短期风险较低,他们可能被错误地保证不采取任何行动。心脏年龄——假设受试者与被评估患者具有相同的短期心血管疾病绝对风险,但具有“理想”风险特征——是一种补充性的相对心血管疾病风险指标,旨在鼓励这些年轻患者改变长期生活方式。然而,临床医生有时会使用心脏年龄来决定药物治疗。我们通过比较心脏年龄和短期心血管疾病风险来评估这种做法的适宜性。方法:新西兰初级保健患者被招募到PREDICT队列中,对他们的心血管疾病风险进行评估。PREDICT是一项正在进行的前瞻性研究,在新西兰三分之一的全科医生中进行,旨在推导心血管疾病风险预测算法。使用已发表的方程计算35-74岁PREDICT参与者的5年心血管疾病风险。心脏年龄的计算采用不吸烟、收缩压为120毫米汞柱、总胆固醇/高密度脂蛋白比值为3.5作为“理想”风险指标。比较心血管疾病风险和心脏年龄差距(实足年龄和心脏年龄之间的差异)。结果:在371 676名PREDICT参与者中,5年CVD风险随着年龄的增长而增加,大约每10年翻一番,而心脏年龄差距随着年龄的增长而减少,在35 - 44岁和65-74岁之间大约减半。5年心血管疾病风险相似但年龄不同的两组之间存在5-40年的心脏年龄差距。结论:短期心血管疾病风险和心脏年龄不是可互换的风险指标。短期风险随着年龄的增长而增加,而心脏年龄差距通常会下降,短期风险相似的年轻人和老年人之间存在重大差异。如果用心脏年龄来决定用药,而不是鼓励改变长期的生活方式,那么短期风险高的老年人可能得不到充分治疗,而短期风险低的年轻人可能不必要地用药。
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来源期刊
Heart
Heart 医学-心血管系统
CiteScore
10.30
自引率
5.30%
发文量
320
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: Heart is an international peer reviewed journal that keeps cardiologists up to date with important research advances in cardiovascular disease. New scientific developments are highlighted in editorials and put in context with concise review articles. There is one free Editor’s Choice article in each issue, with open access options available to authors for all articles. Education in Heart articles provide a comprehensive, continuously updated, cardiology curriculum.
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