
Araştırmacılar, yüksek tansiyon, obezite ve yüksek kolesterol gibi risk faktörlerine kümülatif maruz kalmaya dayalı olarak 40 yaş üstü bireylerde kalp hastalığı riskini tahmin eden bir araç geliştirdiler.
UM Tıp Okulu’ndaki öğretim üyeleri, savunmasız hastalarda risklerin erken tanımlanmasını ve değerlendirilmesini sağlayan son teknoloji bir araç yarattı.
Küresel olarak önde gelen ölüm nedeni olan kalp hastalığı, bilim adamlarını hipertansiyon, obezite ve yüksek kolesterol gibi çoklu risk faktörlerinin bir bireyin kalp krizi veya felç geçirme olasılığı üzerindeki bileşik etkilerini araştırmaya sevk etti. Maryland Üniversitesi Tıp Fakültesi’nden (UMSOM) araştırmacılar, gelişmiş modelleme teknikleri kullanarak, bu risk faktörlerine ömür boyu maruz kalmalarına bağlı olarak 40 yaş üstü bireylerde kalp hastalığı riskini tahmin edebilen yeni bir araç yarattı.
Yakın zamanda yayınlanan çığır açan araştırmaları Amerikan Kardiyoloji Koleji Dergisi, Genç Yetişkinlerde Koroner Arter Riski Gelişimi (CARDIA) çalışmasından yararlanılan veriler. Otuz yıl boyunca ABD’nin dört şehrinden yaklaşık 5.000 sağlıklı genç yetişkini izleyen CARDIA, araştırmacılara hipertansiyon, diyabet ve yüksek kolesterol gibi bireysel risk faktörlerinin birleşik etkilerini hesaplamalarına izin veren veriler sağladı. Ayrıca, çoklu risk faktörlerinin toplam etkisini ölçebildiler.[{” attribute=””>cardiovascular disease.
Black patients were found to have a 46 percent greater risk of developing heart disease compared to white patients. This finding is independent of other risk factors, including family history, smoking habits, and college attendance (a marker of socioeconomic status). Black patients also were found to be more susceptible to cardiovascular effects of uncontrolled high blood pressure as compared to white patients. White patients, on the other hand, were found to be more susceptible to elevated low-density lipoprotein (LDL) levels than Black patients.
“These data make clear the importance of instituting risk-factor reduction strategies as early in life as is feasible to reduce time-related cumulative exposure to harmful risks,” said study lead author Michael J. Domanski, MD, Professor of Medicine, at UMSOM. “These results suggest that a self-declared Black racial status is a marker of underlying and unexplained differences in risk-factor impact.”
The results of this study could help guide physicians in developing personalized prevention strategies for individual patients. Public health policymakers also could use the new risk calculation tool to assess the likely impact of proposed heart disease prevention programs, while researchers could use it to help design clinical trials to test heart disease prevention strategies.
“By examining the long-term impact of multiple risk factors on cardiovascular disease, our study highlights the importance of cumulative exposure in determining an individual’s risk,” said Xin Tian, Ph.D., Adjunct Professor at UMSOM, and a biostatistician at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). “Our findings underscore the need for personalized prevention strategies that address both the time course and severity of these risk factors. As scientists, our duty is to use this knowledge to inform the development of effective prevention and intervention strategies that can reduce the burden of cardiovascular disease on individuals and society as a whole.”
The R Shiny app, developed in this study, is a tool that allows medical providers to insert cardiovascular risks, patient history, and patient race to determine individual risks and how best to address them. Electronic medical records are now widely available, making the development of tools such as the R Shiny app possible. R Shiny can be used to estimate cardiovascular risks after age 40 based on the severity of risk factors earlier in adulthood. The app is hosted on NHLBI’s website.
“Our study demonstrates the power of innovative statistical data-science approaches in enabling biomedical researchers to gain deeper insights into complex health issues, such as cardiovascular disease. We were able to develop risk prediction models that provide a more accurate and personalized assessment of an individual’s risk,” said Colin Wu, Ph.D., Adjunct Professor of Medicine at UMSOM and a mathematical statistician at NHLBI, part of NIH.
During the two-decade follow-up period after age 40, the researchers found that 316 people in the study experienced their first cardiovascular event, including heart disease, strokes, and congestive heart failure.
“This new tool could be used by cardiologists to convince patients to take the necessary steps to lower their risk of heart attack or stroke by quantifying how much their risk would improve if they better managed, for example, their cholesterol and hypertension,” said Mark Gladwin, MD, Dean, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Vice President for Medical Affairs, University of Maryland, Baltimore, and the John Z. and Akiko K. Bowers Distinguished Professor. “That could have a significant impact, particularly in vulnerable populations who have not been aggressively treated for cardiovascular risks in the past due to long-standing health inequities.”
Reference: “Association of Incident Cardiovascular Disease With Time Course and Cumulative Exposure to Multiple Risk Factors” by Michael J. Domanski, Colin O. Wu, Xin Tian, Ahmed A. Hasan, Xiaoyang Ma, Yi Huang, Rui Miao, Jared P. Reis, Sejong Bae, Anwar Husain, David R. Jacobs, Norrina B. Allen, Mei-Ling T. Lee, Charles C. Hong, Michael E. Farkouh, Donald M. Lloyd-Jones and Valentin Fuster, 20 March 2023, Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
DOI: 10.1016/j.jacc.2023.01.024
The CARDIA data used for this research is supported by NHLBI in collaboration with the University of Alabama at Birmingham, Northwestern University, University of Minnesota, and the Kaiser Foundation Research Institute.