Women's Reproductive Milestones and Cardiovascular Disease Risk: A Review of Reports and Opportunities From the CARDIA Study

Author:

Kim Catherine1ORCID,Catov Janet2ORCID,Schreiner Pamela J.3ORCID,Appiah Duke4ORCID,Wellons Melissa F.5,Siscovick David6ORCID,Calderon‐Margalit Ronit7ORCID,Huddleston Heather8,Ebong Imo Asuquo9ORCID,Lewis Cora E.10ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology, and Epidemiology University of Michigan Ann Arbor MI

2. Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh PA

3. Division of Epidemiology and Community Health University of Minnesota Minneapolis MN

4. Department of Public Health, Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences Texas Tech University Lubbock TX

5. Department of Medicine Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville TN

6. New York Academy of Medicine New York NY

7. Hadassah Medical Center Faculty of Medicine Jerusalem Israel

8. Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences University of California San Francisco San Francisco CA

9. University of California Davis CA

10. Department of Epidemiology University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham AL

Abstract

In 1985 to 1986, the CARDIA (Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults) study enrolled 5115 Black or White participants, including 2788 women, aged 18 to 30 years. Over the following 35 years, the CARDIA study amassed extensive longitudinal data on women's reproductive milestones, spanning menarche to menopause. Although not initially conceived as a study of women's health, >75 CARDIA study publications address relationships between reproductive factors and events with cardiovascular and metabolic risk factors, subclinical and clinical cardiovascular disease, and social determinants of health. The CARDIA study was one of the earliest population‐based reports to note Black‐White differences in age at menarche and associations with cardiovascular risk factors. Adverse pregnancy outcomes, particularly gestational diabetes and preterm birth, have been assessed along with postpartum behaviors, such as lactation. Existing studies have examined risk factors for adverse pregnancy outcomes and lactation, as well as their relationship to future cardiovascular and metabolic risk factors, diagnoses, and subclinical atherosclerosis. Ancillary studies examining components of polycystic ovary syndrome and ovarian biomarkers, such as anti‐Müllerian hormone, have facilitated examination of reproductive health in a population‐based cohort of young adult women. As the cohort transitioned through menopause, examination of the importance of premenopausal cardiovascular risk factors along with menopause has improved our understanding of shared mechanisms. The cohort is now aged in the 50s to mid‐60s, and women will begin to experience a greater number of cardiovascular events as well as other conditions, such as cognitive impairment. Thus, in the next decade, the CARDIA study will provide a unique resource for understanding how the women's reproductive life course epidemiology informs cardiovascular risk, as well as reproductive and chronological aging.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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