Childhood Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Adult Cardiovascular Events
University of Cincinnati Medical Center · Faculty of Public Health · +16 more institutions
Abstract
Childhood cardiovascular risk factors predict subclinical adult cardiovascular disease, but links to clinical events are unclear.
In a prospective cohort study involving participants in the International Childhood Cardiovascular Cohort (i3C) Consortium, we evaluated whether childhood risk factors (at the ages of 3 to 19 years) were associated with cardiovascular events in adulthood after a mean follow-up of 35 years. Body-mass index, systolic blood pressure, total cholesterol level, triglyceride level, and youth smoking were analyzed with the use of i3C-derived age- and sex-specific z scores and with a combined-risk z score that was calculated as the unweighted mean of the five risk z scores. An algebraically comparable adult combined-risk z score (before any cardiovascular event) was analyzed jointly with the childhood risk factors. Study outcomes were fatal cardiovascular events and fatal or nonfatal cardiovascular events, and analyses were performed after multiple imputation with the use of proportional-hazards regression.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 207.55
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 25
Authors
19- DRDavid R. JacobsCorresponding
University of Cincinnati Medical Center, Faculty of Public Health
- JGJessica G. Woo
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cancer Research And Biostatistics, University of Cincinnati Medical Center, University of Cincinnati
- ARAlan R. Sinaiko
University of Cincinnati Medical Center, University of Minnesota Medical Center
- SRStephen R. Daniels
Children's Hospital Colorado, University of Colorado Denver, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
- JIJohanna Ikonen
University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Hazard ratio
- Body mass index
- Internal medicine
- Blood pressure
- Proportional hazards model
- Confidence interval
- Cohort
- Good health and well-being