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Redefining Cardiovascular Risk Assessment Using PREVENT

by Karishma Abhishek on Nov 12 2023 10:40 AM
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Tailored for those aged 30 and above, a new tool uses sex-specific, race-free equations to estimate the 10- and 30-year risk of total cardiovascular disease.

Redefining Cardiovascular Risk Assessment Using PREVENT
New American Heart Association PREVENTTM risk calculator as per their Scientific Statement introduces cardiovascular, kidney, and metabolic health measures that estimate the 10- and 30-year risk of total cardiovascular disease, including heart attack, stroke, and heart failure, utilizing sex-specific and race-free equations that account for social determinants of health. The study is published in the Association’s flagship journal Circulation (1 Trusted Source
Novel Prediction Equations for Absolute Risk Assessment of Total Cardiovascular Disease Incorporating Cardiovascular-Kidney-Metabolic Health: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association

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An accompanying methods paper, published simultaneously today in Circulation, shares details about the development and testing as well as the formulas for the new risk calculator. An online tool is in development.

The American Heart Association PREVENTTM (Predicting Risk of Cardiovascular Disease EVENTs) risk calculator estimates heart attack, stroke, and heart failure risk.

The calculator helps incorporate cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic or CKM syndrome into CVD prevention. CKM syndrome was first defined in an October 2023 presidential advisory and scientific statement.

The syndrome refers to the strong connections among cardiovascular disease, kidney disease, and metabolic disease (Type 2 diabetes and obesity).

According to the Association’s 2023 Statistical Update,1 in 3 U.S. adults has three or more risk factors that contribute to cardiovascular disease, kidney disease, and/or metabolic disorders.

As the underlying conditions of CKM syndrome worsen, the risk of heart attack, stroke, and/or heart failure increases.

“A new cardiovascular disease risk calculator was needed, particularly one that includes measures of CKM syndrome, which is highly prevalent in the U.S.,” said Sadiya S. Khan, M.D., M.Sc., FAHA, chair of the statement writing committee for the Association.

“The new PREVENTTM risk calculator enables clinicians to quantify this risk and may help people receive preventive care or treatment earlier to reduce CVD risk.”

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Evolution of Heart Health

The PREVENTTM risk calculator uniquely quantifies risks for CVD for each biological sex. As more research has been conducted specifically on women, this is an important way to understand their unique differences in CVD presentation and risk factors.

PREVENTTM does not include race in its calculation, acknowledging that race is a social factor and not a biological variable and, therefore, is not a valid factor for predicting CVD risk. There is an option in PREVENTTM to include social factors if available.

The last CVD risk calculator, the Pooled Cohort Equation, was released in 2013. “However, new treatments are now available for CKM conditions such as obesity, Type 2 diabetes, and kidney disease,” said Khan, who is the Magerstadt Professor of Cardiovascular Epidemiology and an associate professor of medicine (cardiology) and preventive medicine (epidemiology) at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine and a preventive cardiologist at Northwestern Medicine, both in Chicago.

“Estimating a person’s risk for CVD related to these conditions with the new PREVENTTM risk calculator should prompt conversations between health professionals and patients to increase awareness of CKM health status and CVD risk, and to translate that awareness into actions that improve health and reduce risk,” said Khan.

“This includes health and lifestyle changes (routine physical activity, eating healthy foods) and possibly medications, if appropriate.”

A risk calculator uses health, demographic, and/or socioeconomic information in equations to calculate a risk estimate or score. Equations are developed by scientists based on information in national databases, large research studies, and electronic health records.

The PREVENTTM equations were developed using data from more than 6 million adults in the U.S. from a variety of racial ethnic, socioeconomic, and geographic backgrounds.

Information from the health records of about half of those people was used to develop the calculator, and then it was verified in the other half. Some data were collected from research studies, while other data were drawn from the electronic medical records of people seeking regular health care outside of a research setting.

With this broad population, the calculator is more likely to accurately represent and apply to the general adult population in the U.S.

PREVENTTM equations use screening tests already in use in primary care to predict risk. Blood pressure measurement; blood tests for cholesterol, blood sugar, and kidney function; and questions about tobacco use and whether people take medications for CVD risk factors are common in health assessments.

This information can be entered in the PREVENT TM risk calculator, along with a person’s age and sex, to determine estimated risk.

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PREVENTTM Risk Calculator Unveiled

Key differences in the PREVENTTM calculator compared to the Pooled Cohort Equations include:

PREVENTTM is for adults as young as age 30 and estimates a 10-year and 30-year risk of total cardiovascular disease.

The Pooled Cohort Equations were designed to assess the 10-year risk of heart attack and/or stroke for people ages 40-79. The new calculator can assess CVD risk in people from ages 30 to 79, and it can predict risk for heart attack, stroke, and/or heart failure over the next 10 years and 30 years.

“Longer-term estimates are important because short-term or 10-year risk in most young adults is still going to be low. We wanted to think more broadly and apply a life-course perspective,” Khan said.

“Providing information on 30-year risk may reveal earlier opportunities for intervention and prevention efforts in younger people.”

PREVENTTM can also inform a person’s CKM syndrome stage when risk is high to help guide further assessments and treatment recommendations. CKM syndrome ranges from Stage 0, or no risk factors and an entirely preventive focus, to Stage 4, the highest-risk stage, when cardiovascular disease is already present.

The PREVENTTM risk calculator includes measures of kidney function

Kidney function is important in cardiovascular health, and chronic kidney disease increases cardiovascular risks.

The calculator includes an estimated glomerular filtration rate and allows for the use of urine albumin excretion (which monitors kidney disease) to further individualize risk assessment and help inform personalized treatment options.

The PREVENTTM risk calculator includes a measure of metabolic health

The PREVENTTM equations allow the inclusion of hemoglobin A1C, a measure of blood sugar control, if necessary to monitor metabolic health. Abnormal blood sugar is associated with CVD risk in people with and without Type 2 diabetes.

Heart failure is a serious condition in which the heart isn’t pumping well enough to keep up with the body’s need for oxygen-rich blood. Heart failure is especially important in the context of CKM syndrome.

Among people with obesity, Type 2 diabetes, and/or kidney disease, the risk for heart failure can be higher than the risk for heart attack or stroke.

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PREVENTTM and the Cardiovascular Equation

While there are clear racial and ethnic disparities in CVD risk factors and the incidence of CVD among people based on the social construct of race and ethnicity, the statement writing committee concluded that race should not be included in the PREVENTTM calculator.

This decision is in line with a growing consensus in the scientific and medical community to remove race from algorithms in medical care to reduce the potential for race-specific treatment decisions.

“The Pooled Cohort Equations were developed with data from only White and Black adults and had separate equations for people of each race. There was not a risk model for individuals from other race and ethnicity groups, so we likely were not accurately estimating risk in many people,” Khan said.

“Part of the rationale for race-specific equations was that race was considered a proxy or substitute for the lived experience of racism and its potential health effects. However, we were concerned that the inclusion of race as a proxy may still be harmful.”

The PREVENTTM calculator has similar accuracy among varied racial and ethnic groups. Also, the equations include the option to use the Social Deprivation Index, which incorporates measures of adverse social determinants of health such as education, poverty, unemployment, and factors based on a person’s environment.

“The PREVENTTM equations are a critical first step toward including CKM health and social factors in risk prediction for CVD,” Khan said.

“Concerted research efforts are needed to determine the causal and social factors that underlie racial differences in CVD risks and outcomes. As we strive towards more equitable preventive care, we also acknowledge that racism, and not race, operates at multiple levels to increase risk for CVD.”

Beyond Numbers — A New Era in Cardiovascular Risk Prediction

The statement includes an assessment of gaps in knowledge and suggestions on where the PREVENTTM equations could be further refined with more research. These include:

Incorporating “net benefit” to identify the expected benefit of treatment recommendations based on an individual’s level of risk.

Collecting more data from people of diverse races and ethnic backgrounds to better represent the increasing diversity in the U.S.

The number of Hispanic and Asian people included in the PREVENTTM datasets is lower than national estimates in the general U.S. population, so risk estimations in these populations may be less precise.

Expanding the collection, reporting, and standardization of social determinants of health data, such as individual information rather than neighborhood information.

Future research should prioritize systematic assessment of social factors so health impacts of structural racism may be better understood and addressed.

Expanding risk assessment and prevention to earlier in life (childhood and/or adolescence) and in key life periods, such as during the peripartum period since adverse pregnancy outcomes are associated with increased CVD risk.

Investigating whether predicting adverse kidney outcomes, particularly among people with and without Type 2 diabetes, may further optimize cardiovascular risk prediction.

This scientific statement was prepared by the volunteer writing group on behalf of the American Heart Association.

The Association’s scientific statements promote greater awareness about cardiovascular diseases and stroke issues and help facilitate informed healthcare decisions.

Scientific statements outline what is currently known about a topic and what areas need additional research. While scientific statements inform the development of guidelines, they do not make treatment recommendations.

American Heart Association guidelines provide its official clinical practice recommendations.

Reference:
  1. Novel Prediction Equations for Absolute Risk Assessment of Total Cardiovascular Disease Incorporating Cardiovascular-Kidney-Metabolic Health: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association - (https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIR.0000000000001191)

Source-Eurekalert


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