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Association of a favorable cardiovascular health profile (Life"s Simple 7 and Fuster-BEWAT scores) with the presence of a newly proposed 4-tiered left ventricular hypertrophy

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Type of funding sources: None. AHA"s Life"s Simple 7 cardiovascular health score is recommended for use in primary prevention. Simpler tools not requiring laboratory tests, such as the Fuster-BEWAT score… Click to show full abstract

Type of funding sources: None. AHA"s Life"s Simple 7 cardiovascular health score is recommended for use in primary prevention. Simpler tools not requiring laboratory tests, such as the Fuster-BEWAT score (FBS) (blood pressure [B], exercise [E], weight [W], alimentation [A], and tobacco [T]), are also available. This study sought to compare the effectiveness of Life"s Simple 7 and FBS in predicting the newly proposed 4-tiered left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) classification based on LV dilatation (high LV end-diastolic volume [EDV] index) and concentricity (mass/end-diastolic volume [M/EDV]0.67) in the general Chinese population. Participants from Northeast China Rural Cardiovascular Health study who underwent cardiac echocardiography (n = 11,261) were enrolled. Patients with LVH were divided into 4 groups—eccentric nondilated (normal M/EDV and EDV), eccentric dilated (increased EDV, normal M/EDV), concentric nondilated (increased M/EDV, normal EDV), and concentric dilated (increased M/EDV and EDV)—and compared with patients with normal LVM. With poor Life"s Simple 7 and FBS as references, individuals with ideal Life"s Simple 7 and FBS showed lower adjusted odds of having eccentric nondilated (Life"s Simple 7, odds ratio [OR]: 0.26; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.20 to 0.34 vs. FBS, OR: 0.28; 95% CI: 0.20 to 0.38), eccentric dilated (OR: 0.73 [0.57-0.94] vs. OR: 0.57 [0.43-0.76]), concentric nondilated (OR: 0.12 [0.04-0.38] vs. OR: 0.19 [0.07-0.52]), and concentric dilated LVH (OR: 0.12 [0.03-0.37] vs. OR: 0.26 [0.10-0.72]). Taken together, the odds for these 4 LV geometric phenotypes decreased in a graded manner in subjects with intermediate and ideal ICHS and FBS compared with subjects with poor ICHS and FBS (p for trend <0.01). For the total ICHS and FBS on a continuous scale from 0 (all 7 poor) to 7 (all 7 ideal), risk reductions of the 4 distinct LVH patterns were of comparable magnitude for each 1-point increment of ICHS and FBS. Similar levels of significantly discriminating accuracy were found for Life"s Simple 7 and FBS with respect to the eccentric nondilated (C-statistic: 0.737; 95% CI: 0.725 to 0.750 vs. 0.731; 95% CI: 0.718 to 0.744, respectively), eccentric dilated (0.684 [0.670-0.699] vs. 0.686 [0.671-0.701]), concentric nondilated (0.658 [0.624-0.692] vs. 0.650 [0.615-0.684]), and concentric dilated LVH (0.711 [0.678-0.744] vs. 0.698 [0.663-0.733]).  Our findings demonstrate that the FBS appears capable of performing just as well as does the Life"s Simple 7 in predicting the novel 4-group classification of LVH, making the FBS particularly suited as a reliable low-cost indicator of CV health in settings where access to laboratory analysis is limited and health care resources are constrained. Abstract Figure.

Keywords: fbs; edv; life; cardiovascular health; life simple

Journal Title: European Journal of Preventive Cardiology
Year Published: 2021

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