Risk can be as high as one in two in individuals with risk factors
Northwestern University
Imagine visiting the doctor, answering a few basic questions and getting an on-the-spot estimate of whether you'll experience heart failure in the next 30 years.
Such a model now
exists, thanks to a new Northwestern Medicine study, which derived and
validated the first set of risk prediction models for lifetime risk of heart
failure.
The ability to
identify who is at greatest risk for heart failure -- especially among
high-risk young adult populations -- will allow physicians to start prevention
measures sooner.
"Once someone develops symptoms of heart failure, the window for prevention has closed, which is a missed opportunity, given that the risk of dying in the five years after diagnosis is 50%, similar to a cancer diagnosis," said corresponding study author Dr. Sadiya Khan, assistant professor of cardiology and epidemiology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and a Northwestern Medicine physician.
Prior to this
work, no models existed for estimating long-term risk for heart failure.
Short-term models exist that estimate heart-failure risk in the next five to 10
years, But those aren't as effective for young adults who may not develop heart
failure until they are older.
Now, for the
first time, the model will allow doctors to estimate a person's risk of
developing heart failure in the next 30 years based on their current risk
factor levels, such as body mass index, blood pressure, cholesterol, diabetes
and smoking status. The scientists are currently working on an online tool that
could be used by physicians.
The study was
recently published in Circulation
Research, a journal of the American Heart Association.
Heart failure is
the primary cause of one million hospitalizations and contributes to 300,000
deaths annually in the United States. That trend is only continuing to rise,
Khan said.
Not all people
with hypertension or obesity have the same risk for heart failure, Khan said.
Currently, there are effective strategies to reduce a person's risk of heart
failure. These include lowering blood pressure or blood sugar with specific
medications combined with diet and exercise. But without being able to quantify
a person's risk of developing heart failure, it is difficult to identify who
should receive these prevention measures.
"These new
models offer the opportunity for clinicians and patients to begin discussions
at the individual level for opportunities to start prevention earlier in the
life course," Khan said. "This moves the field forward by offering a
precision approach to prevention and moving beyond risk associated with having
or not having hypertension or diabetes."
Since it is well
known that risk of heart failure differs between Black and white men and women,
the risk-prediction models were derived in each individual demographic
subgroup, Khan said.
For example, in an average 40-year-old non-smoker with an untreated systolic blood pressure of 140 mm Hg, which is high, and body mass index of 30 kg/m2 , which is considered obese, the risk of developing heart failure was estimated to be 22.8% in a Black man, 13.7% in a white man, 13.0% in a Black woman, and 12.1% in a white woman.