Shouling Wu, Zhijun Wu, Dongmei Yu, Shuohua Chen, Aitian Wang, Anxin Wang, Xiang Gao

Life’s Essential 8 and Risk of Stroke: A Prospective Community-Based Study

  • Advanced and Specialized Nursing
  • Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
  • Neurology (clinical)

BACKGROUND: Data are lacking regarding cardiovascular health (CVH) with Life’s Essential 8 approach and future stroke risk. We sought to elucidate whether the CVH score constructed by the Life’s Essential 8 metrics predicted stroke risk in 2 Chinese ongoing cohorts. METHODS: This included 41 043 participants of the Kailuan I study and 27 842 participants of the Kailuan II study who were free of cardiovascular disease or cancer in 2014. CVH score (ranged from 0 to 100) was assessed using the Life’s Essential 8 metrics (body mass index, cigarette smoking, diet quality, physical activity, sleep health, lipid, blood glucose, and blood pressure). A composite of incident stroke events (ischemic stroke and hemorrhagic stroke) was identified via review of medical records. The follow-up period was calculated from the finishing date of the 2014 survey to either the date of stroke occurrence, death, loss to follow-up, or the end of follow-up (December 31, 2020). We also examined the longitudinal association between the CVH score and arterial stiffness status, as assessed by brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity, in 25 922 participants free of cardiovascular disease during the follow-up. We performed a meta-analysis to assess the association between CVH, based on the 2010 American Heart Association recommendation, and stroke integrating the results of current study and previous studies. RESULTS: During a median follow-up of 5.65 years (interquartile range, 5.20–6.09), a total of 1750 incident stroke events were identified in the pooled Kailuan study. The pooled hazard ratios were 0.33 (95% CI, 0.20–0.54) for ideal versus poor health category of CVH ( P trend <0.0001). Higher CVH scores were also associated with lower brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity values at baseline and slower increments of brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity during follow-up ( P trend ≤0.001 for both). Arterial stiffness mediated 9.07% (95% CI, 5.83%–15.0%) of the total association between CVH and incident stroke. The pooled hazard ratio comparing 2 extreme CVH categories for stroke was 0.45 (95% CI, 0.35–0.59) when including 10 published studies and the current study. CONCLUSIONS: The CVH score as assessed by the Life’s Essential 8 metrics significantly predicted future stroke risk and arterial stiffness status.

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