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– Arguably one of the most important and far-reaching studies presented at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology didn’t take place in the massive main ballroom with dazzling lights and sound and thousands of cardiologists in attendance, but in a tiny, makeshift, open-sided venue slapped together of cardboard and fiberboard and plunked down in the noisy poster hall.

Dr. Terence Dwyer, emeritus professor of epidemiology at University of Oxford, England
Bruce Jancin/MDedge News
Dr. Terence Dwyer

It was there that Terence Dwyer, MBBS, MD, began by observing, “We know quite a bit about the relationship of cardiovascular risk factors in adults to cardiovascular disease; we know virtually nothing about the relationship of those risk factors in childhood because – until now – there has been no direct evidence relating to this. What I’m going to present to you is some direct evidence.”

The data come from the International Childhood Cardiovascular Cohort (i3C) Consortium, which includes investigators from seven pioneering prospective child cohort studies, which collectively measured major cardiovascular risk factors in more than 42,000 children beginning back in the 1970s.

Some of these studies will be familiar names to many American physicians and epidemiologists. They include the Bogolusa Heart Study, the Muscatine Study, the Princeton Lipid Research Clinic Study, and the Minneapolis Childhood Cohort Studies. Similar studies were launched decades ago in Australia and Finland. The oldest of these cohorts are now in their 50s, and they are developing cardiovascular disease. The new i3C findings based on pooled data from these studies provides the first direct evidence that high serum cholesterol, blood pressure, body mass index, and smoking in childhood are linked to increased risk of hospitalization for acute MI, stroke, and peripheral artery disease in early middle age, said Dr. Dwyer, emeritus professor of epidemiology at the University of Oxford (England).

The analysis showed that each 10% increase above average in serum cholesterol in childhood was associated with a 16% increased risk of hospitalization for a cardiovascular event at a mean age of 49 years. A 2-point rise in BMI was associated with a 20% higher risk. A 10% increase above average in systolic blood pressure in childhood was linked to a 40% increase in risk of a cardiovascular event in later life. And smoking in childhood or adolescence was associated with a 77% higher risk of a cardiovascular event.

The i3C analysis also demonstrated that exposure to cardiovascular risk factors in childhood has an adverse effect above and beyond that seen when the same risk factors are present only in adulthood. For example, individuals who both as adults and children had two or more of the four major cardiovascular risk factors studied had a sixfold greater risk of a major cardiovascular event in early middle age than if they had two or more risk factors as adults but none as children. If they had two or more risk factors as adults and one risk factor in childhood, their risk of a cardiovascular event was roughly twice as great as if they had no risk factors as a child. And if they had two or more risk factors present in childhood but none in adulthood, their risk of an event was threefold higher than if none of the four major cardiovascular risk factors were present during both periods of life, he continued.

The investigators consider their findings preliminary because most participants in the cohort studies are just reaching age 50 years.

“As we follow them for another 5 years, because of their age, the number of cardiovascular events will increase dramatically,” Dr. Dwyer explained. “One of the reasons we’re presenting this data now in preliminary form is these cohort studies will be the only data of this kind for about another 20 years. We want it out there when it can be most useful. It’s not like the situation with RCTs [randomized, controlled trials] where you’re able to wait 2 years for the next RCT.”

 

 

Clinical and policy implications

Asked about the clinical implications of the i3C findings, he replied, “At the very least, at this stage, consideration should be given to lowering risk factors in childhood as a greater priority in the cardiovascular disease prevention field.”

From my experience on national committees that look at what we do about cardiovascular prevention in childhood, they generally say we’re unprepared to take a strong stance on this because we have no direct evidence that these risk factors and what underpins them are a genuine problem,” according to Dr. Dwyer.

That’s no longer the case. By the end of the year, the i3C investigators expect to publish their results. As word reaches the public, he expects to finally see a growing momentum for cardiovascular prevention in pediatrics.

“Just imagine saying to a parent, ‘It looks highly likely that if you don’t do anything about the weight your children have put on, or other risk factors, they will be left at the end of childhood with a residual risk for cardiovascular disease that it doesn’t appear can be completely eradicated. It can be reduced by interventions in adulthood, but something’s happened there in childhood that was important.’ I think parents will demand action at that time,” he said.

Dr. Donald Lloyd-Jones, chair of the department of preventive medicine at Northwestern University, Chicago
Bruce Jancin/MDedge News
Dr. Donald Lloyd-Jones

In an interview, Donald Lloyd-Jones, MD, called the i3C data “incredibly important.”

“The risk factor values that they’re looking at in kids are not abnormal, they’re at the higher range of what we consider very normal, and yet those slightly elevated exposures within the normal range are causing damage. These kids are accruing risk for atherosclerosis down the road, even within what’s considered to be normal ranges,” commented Dr. Lloyd-Jones, senior associate dean for clinical and translational research and chair of the department of preventive medicine at Northwestern University, Chicago.

“I think it’s very telling that, early in life, we can delineate trajectories already emerging about how these kids are going to play out the rest of their lives in terms of their atherosclerosis and cardiovascular risk. That’s a very important thing to recognize, and we haven’t always thought that way. We always thought you arrive at your 21st birthday and then things start to matter, and by the time you got to 50, now it really matters. But the truth is the horse is already well out of the barn at age 50 and it’s coming out of the barn at age 21. That’s what the i3C data are starting to tell us: that it’s incredibly important that we move further upstream,” the cardiologist added.

What’s the best way forward?

“We have to create an environment where we tilt the playing field towards healthy choices. Sometimes that means taxation policy: It worked for alcohol and tobacco. Sometimes that means frank prohibition: indoor smoking laws have had a huge beneficial effect on public health. Sometimes it’s more controversial, like taxes on sugar-sweetened beverages, but I think that’s an experiment we have to play out to see if it works,” according to Dr. Lloyd-Jones. “I think our best solutions are going to come through policy, environmental change, and lifestyle in the early years because it’s just not practical to think about introducing foreign substances to mass amounts of kids.”

He noted that the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute has held two workshops within the past year focused on these very issues.

Dr. Lloyd-Jones, past-honored as the American Heart Association Physician of the Year in recognition of his decades of work with that organization in advancing cardiovascular prevention, said “there’s a very good chance” the AHA will take on a major role in what he anticipates will be a much greater emphasis on cardiovascular prevention starting in early life in order to favorably alter life trajectories.

“Stay tuned in the next few months. We’re coming to a decade change, so as we enter 2020, the AHA will be promulgating its strategic goals for the next decade. The AHA is a much bigger, better-funded organization than it was even 10 years ago, and they’re looking to partner with groups like the Robert Woods Johnson Foundation, the Centers for Disease Control, [and] the NIH, to actually make major policy initiatives on cardiovascular prevention,” he said.

The i3C study was funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Dr. Dwyer reported having no financial conflicts of interest.

 

 

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– Arguably one of the most important and far-reaching studies presented at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology didn’t take place in the massive main ballroom with dazzling lights and sound and thousands of cardiologists in attendance, but in a tiny, makeshift, open-sided venue slapped together of cardboard and fiberboard and plunked down in the noisy poster hall.

Dr. Terence Dwyer, emeritus professor of epidemiology at University of Oxford, England
Bruce Jancin/MDedge News
Dr. Terence Dwyer

It was there that Terence Dwyer, MBBS, MD, began by observing, “We know quite a bit about the relationship of cardiovascular risk factors in adults to cardiovascular disease; we know virtually nothing about the relationship of those risk factors in childhood because – until now – there has been no direct evidence relating to this. What I’m going to present to you is some direct evidence.”

The data come from the International Childhood Cardiovascular Cohort (i3C) Consortium, which includes investigators from seven pioneering prospective child cohort studies, which collectively measured major cardiovascular risk factors in more than 42,000 children beginning back in the 1970s.

Some of these studies will be familiar names to many American physicians and epidemiologists. They include the Bogolusa Heart Study, the Muscatine Study, the Princeton Lipid Research Clinic Study, and the Minneapolis Childhood Cohort Studies. Similar studies were launched decades ago in Australia and Finland. The oldest of these cohorts are now in their 50s, and they are developing cardiovascular disease. The new i3C findings based on pooled data from these studies provides the first direct evidence that high serum cholesterol, blood pressure, body mass index, and smoking in childhood are linked to increased risk of hospitalization for acute MI, stroke, and peripheral artery disease in early middle age, said Dr. Dwyer, emeritus professor of epidemiology at the University of Oxford (England).

The analysis showed that each 10% increase above average in serum cholesterol in childhood was associated with a 16% increased risk of hospitalization for a cardiovascular event at a mean age of 49 years. A 2-point rise in BMI was associated with a 20% higher risk. A 10% increase above average in systolic blood pressure in childhood was linked to a 40% increase in risk of a cardiovascular event in later life. And smoking in childhood or adolescence was associated with a 77% higher risk of a cardiovascular event.

The i3C analysis also demonstrated that exposure to cardiovascular risk factors in childhood has an adverse effect above and beyond that seen when the same risk factors are present only in adulthood. For example, individuals who both as adults and children had two or more of the four major cardiovascular risk factors studied had a sixfold greater risk of a major cardiovascular event in early middle age than if they had two or more risk factors as adults but none as children. If they had two or more risk factors as adults and one risk factor in childhood, their risk of a cardiovascular event was roughly twice as great as if they had no risk factors as a child. And if they had two or more risk factors present in childhood but none in adulthood, their risk of an event was threefold higher than if none of the four major cardiovascular risk factors were present during both periods of life, he continued.

The investigators consider their findings preliminary because most participants in the cohort studies are just reaching age 50 years.

“As we follow them for another 5 years, because of their age, the number of cardiovascular events will increase dramatically,” Dr. Dwyer explained. “One of the reasons we’re presenting this data now in preliminary form is these cohort studies will be the only data of this kind for about another 20 years. We want it out there when it can be most useful. It’s not like the situation with RCTs [randomized, controlled trials] where you’re able to wait 2 years for the next RCT.”

 

 

Clinical and policy implications

Asked about the clinical implications of the i3C findings, he replied, “At the very least, at this stage, consideration should be given to lowering risk factors in childhood as a greater priority in the cardiovascular disease prevention field.”

From my experience on national committees that look at what we do about cardiovascular prevention in childhood, they generally say we’re unprepared to take a strong stance on this because we have no direct evidence that these risk factors and what underpins them are a genuine problem,” according to Dr. Dwyer.

That’s no longer the case. By the end of the year, the i3C investigators expect to publish their results. As word reaches the public, he expects to finally see a growing momentum for cardiovascular prevention in pediatrics.

“Just imagine saying to a parent, ‘It looks highly likely that if you don’t do anything about the weight your children have put on, or other risk factors, they will be left at the end of childhood with a residual risk for cardiovascular disease that it doesn’t appear can be completely eradicated. It can be reduced by interventions in adulthood, but something’s happened there in childhood that was important.’ I think parents will demand action at that time,” he said.

Dr. Donald Lloyd-Jones, chair of the department of preventive medicine at Northwestern University, Chicago
Bruce Jancin/MDedge News
Dr. Donald Lloyd-Jones

In an interview, Donald Lloyd-Jones, MD, called the i3C data “incredibly important.”

“The risk factor values that they’re looking at in kids are not abnormal, they’re at the higher range of what we consider very normal, and yet those slightly elevated exposures within the normal range are causing damage. These kids are accruing risk for atherosclerosis down the road, even within what’s considered to be normal ranges,” commented Dr. Lloyd-Jones, senior associate dean for clinical and translational research and chair of the department of preventive medicine at Northwestern University, Chicago.

“I think it’s very telling that, early in life, we can delineate trajectories already emerging about how these kids are going to play out the rest of their lives in terms of their atherosclerosis and cardiovascular risk. That’s a very important thing to recognize, and we haven’t always thought that way. We always thought you arrive at your 21st birthday and then things start to matter, and by the time you got to 50, now it really matters. But the truth is the horse is already well out of the barn at age 50 and it’s coming out of the barn at age 21. That’s what the i3C data are starting to tell us: that it’s incredibly important that we move further upstream,” the cardiologist added.

What’s the best way forward?

“We have to create an environment where we tilt the playing field towards healthy choices. Sometimes that means taxation policy: It worked for alcohol and tobacco. Sometimes that means frank prohibition: indoor smoking laws have had a huge beneficial effect on public health. Sometimes it’s more controversial, like taxes on sugar-sweetened beverages, but I think that’s an experiment we have to play out to see if it works,” according to Dr. Lloyd-Jones. “I think our best solutions are going to come through policy, environmental change, and lifestyle in the early years because it’s just not practical to think about introducing foreign substances to mass amounts of kids.”

He noted that the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute has held two workshops within the past year focused on these very issues.

Dr. Lloyd-Jones, past-honored as the American Heart Association Physician of the Year in recognition of his decades of work with that organization in advancing cardiovascular prevention, said “there’s a very good chance” the AHA will take on a major role in what he anticipates will be a much greater emphasis on cardiovascular prevention starting in early life in order to favorably alter life trajectories.

“Stay tuned in the next few months. We’re coming to a decade change, so as we enter 2020, the AHA will be promulgating its strategic goals for the next decade. The AHA is a much bigger, better-funded organization than it was even 10 years ago, and they’re looking to partner with groups like the Robert Woods Johnson Foundation, the Centers for Disease Control, [and] the NIH, to actually make major policy initiatives on cardiovascular prevention,” he said.

The i3C study was funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Dr. Dwyer reported having no financial conflicts of interest.

 

 

– Arguably one of the most important and far-reaching studies presented at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology didn’t take place in the massive main ballroom with dazzling lights and sound and thousands of cardiologists in attendance, but in a tiny, makeshift, open-sided venue slapped together of cardboard and fiberboard and plunked down in the noisy poster hall.

Dr. Terence Dwyer, emeritus professor of epidemiology at University of Oxford, England
Bruce Jancin/MDedge News
Dr. Terence Dwyer

It was there that Terence Dwyer, MBBS, MD, began by observing, “We know quite a bit about the relationship of cardiovascular risk factors in adults to cardiovascular disease; we know virtually nothing about the relationship of those risk factors in childhood because – until now – there has been no direct evidence relating to this. What I’m going to present to you is some direct evidence.”

The data come from the International Childhood Cardiovascular Cohort (i3C) Consortium, which includes investigators from seven pioneering prospective child cohort studies, which collectively measured major cardiovascular risk factors in more than 42,000 children beginning back in the 1970s.

Some of these studies will be familiar names to many American physicians and epidemiologists. They include the Bogolusa Heart Study, the Muscatine Study, the Princeton Lipid Research Clinic Study, and the Minneapolis Childhood Cohort Studies. Similar studies were launched decades ago in Australia and Finland. The oldest of these cohorts are now in their 50s, and they are developing cardiovascular disease. The new i3C findings based on pooled data from these studies provides the first direct evidence that high serum cholesterol, blood pressure, body mass index, and smoking in childhood are linked to increased risk of hospitalization for acute MI, stroke, and peripheral artery disease in early middle age, said Dr. Dwyer, emeritus professor of epidemiology at the University of Oxford (England).

The analysis showed that each 10% increase above average in serum cholesterol in childhood was associated with a 16% increased risk of hospitalization for a cardiovascular event at a mean age of 49 years. A 2-point rise in BMI was associated with a 20% higher risk. A 10% increase above average in systolic blood pressure in childhood was linked to a 40% increase in risk of a cardiovascular event in later life. And smoking in childhood or adolescence was associated with a 77% higher risk of a cardiovascular event.

The i3C analysis also demonstrated that exposure to cardiovascular risk factors in childhood has an adverse effect above and beyond that seen when the same risk factors are present only in adulthood. For example, individuals who both as adults and children had two or more of the four major cardiovascular risk factors studied had a sixfold greater risk of a major cardiovascular event in early middle age than if they had two or more risk factors as adults but none as children. If they had two or more risk factors as adults and one risk factor in childhood, their risk of a cardiovascular event was roughly twice as great as if they had no risk factors as a child. And if they had two or more risk factors present in childhood but none in adulthood, their risk of an event was threefold higher than if none of the four major cardiovascular risk factors were present during both periods of life, he continued.

The investigators consider their findings preliminary because most participants in the cohort studies are just reaching age 50 years.

“As we follow them for another 5 years, because of their age, the number of cardiovascular events will increase dramatically,” Dr. Dwyer explained. “One of the reasons we’re presenting this data now in preliminary form is these cohort studies will be the only data of this kind for about another 20 years. We want it out there when it can be most useful. It’s not like the situation with RCTs [randomized, controlled trials] where you’re able to wait 2 years for the next RCT.”

 

 

Clinical and policy implications

Asked about the clinical implications of the i3C findings, he replied, “At the very least, at this stage, consideration should be given to lowering risk factors in childhood as a greater priority in the cardiovascular disease prevention field.”

From my experience on national committees that look at what we do about cardiovascular prevention in childhood, they generally say we’re unprepared to take a strong stance on this because we have no direct evidence that these risk factors and what underpins them are a genuine problem,” according to Dr. Dwyer.

That’s no longer the case. By the end of the year, the i3C investigators expect to publish their results. As word reaches the public, he expects to finally see a growing momentum for cardiovascular prevention in pediatrics.

“Just imagine saying to a parent, ‘It looks highly likely that if you don’t do anything about the weight your children have put on, or other risk factors, they will be left at the end of childhood with a residual risk for cardiovascular disease that it doesn’t appear can be completely eradicated. It can be reduced by interventions in adulthood, but something’s happened there in childhood that was important.’ I think parents will demand action at that time,” he said.

Dr. Donald Lloyd-Jones, chair of the department of preventive medicine at Northwestern University, Chicago
Bruce Jancin/MDedge News
Dr. Donald Lloyd-Jones

In an interview, Donald Lloyd-Jones, MD, called the i3C data “incredibly important.”

“The risk factor values that they’re looking at in kids are not abnormal, they’re at the higher range of what we consider very normal, and yet those slightly elevated exposures within the normal range are causing damage. These kids are accruing risk for atherosclerosis down the road, even within what’s considered to be normal ranges,” commented Dr. Lloyd-Jones, senior associate dean for clinical and translational research and chair of the department of preventive medicine at Northwestern University, Chicago.

“I think it’s very telling that, early in life, we can delineate trajectories already emerging about how these kids are going to play out the rest of their lives in terms of their atherosclerosis and cardiovascular risk. That’s a very important thing to recognize, and we haven’t always thought that way. We always thought you arrive at your 21st birthday and then things start to matter, and by the time you got to 50, now it really matters. But the truth is the horse is already well out of the barn at age 50 and it’s coming out of the barn at age 21. That’s what the i3C data are starting to tell us: that it’s incredibly important that we move further upstream,” the cardiologist added.

What’s the best way forward?

“We have to create an environment where we tilt the playing field towards healthy choices. Sometimes that means taxation policy: It worked for alcohol and tobacco. Sometimes that means frank prohibition: indoor smoking laws have had a huge beneficial effect on public health. Sometimes it’s more controversial, like taxes on sugar-sweetened beverages, but I think that’s an experiment we have to play out to see if it works,” according to Dr. Lloyd-Jones. “I think our best solutions are going to come through policy, environmental change, and lifestyle in the early years because it’s just not practical to think about introducing foreign substances to mass amounts of kids.”

He noted that the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute has held two workshops within the past year focused on these very issues.

Dr. Lloyd-Jones, past-honored as the American Heart Association Physician of the Year in recognition of his decades of work with that organization in advancing cardiovascular prevention, said “there’s a very good chance” the AHA will take on a major role in what he anticipates will be a much greater emphasis on cardiovascular prevention starting in early life in order to favorably alter life trajectories.

“Stay tuned in the next few months. We’re coming to a decade change, so as we enter 2020, the AHA will be promulgating its strategic goals for the next decade. The AHA is a much bigger, better-funded organization than it was even 10 years ago, and they’re looking to partner with groups like the Robert Woods Johnson Foundation, the Centers for Disease Control, [and] the NIH, to actually make major policy initiatives on cardiovascular prevention,” he said.

The i3C study was funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Dr. Dwyer reported having no financial conflicts of interest.

 

 

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