Subclinical Vascular Composites Predict Clinical Cardiovascular Disease, Stroke, and Dementia: The Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA)

Author:

Hughes Timothy M.ORCID,Tanley Jordan,Chen Haiying,Schaich Christopher L.ORCID,Yeboah Joseph,Espeland Mark A.,Lima Joao A. C.ORCID,Ambale-Venkatesh BharathORCID,Michos Erin D.ORCID,Ding Jingzhong,Hayden KathleenORCID,Casanova Ramon,Craft Suzanne,Rapp Stephen R.ORCID,Luchsinger José A.ORCID,Fitzpatrick Annette L.,Heckbert Susan R.ORCID,Post Wendy S.ORCID,Burke Gregory L.

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundSubclinical cardiovascular disease (CVD) measures may reflect biological pathways that contribute to increased risk for coronary heart disease (CHD) events, stroke, and dementia beyond conventional risk scores.MethodsThe Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA) followed 6,814 participants (45-84 years of age) from baseline in 2000-2002 to 2018 over 6 clinical examinations and annual follow-up interviews. MESA baseline subclinical CVD procedures included: seated and supine blood pressure, coronary calcium scan, radial artery tonometry, and carotid ultrasound. Baseline subclinical CVD measures were transformed into z-scores before factor analysis to derive composite factor scores. Time to clinical event for all CVD, CHD, stroke and ICD code-based dementia events were modeled using Cox proportional hazards models reported as area under the curve (AUC) with 95% Confidence Intervals (95%CI) at 10 and 15 years of follow-up. All models included all factor scores together and adjustment for conventional risk scores for global CVD, stroke, and dementia.ResultsAfter factor selection, 24 subclinical measures aggregated into four distinct factors representing: blood pressure, arteriosclerosis, atherosclerosis, and cardiac factors. Each factor significantly predicted time to CVD events and dementia at 10 and 15 years independent of each other and conventional risk scores. Subclinical vascular composites of arteriosclerosis and atherosclerosis best predicted time to clinical events of CVD, CHD, stroke, and dementia. These results were consistent across sex and racial and ethnic groups.ConclusionsSubclinical vascular composites of arteriosclerosis and atherosclerosis may be useful biomarkers to inform the vascular pathways contributing to events of CVD, CHD, stroke, and dementia.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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