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Individuals
exposed to adverse neighborhood social factors in early adulthood demonstrated
a higher risk of developing coronary artery calcification in midlife, a key
measure of early cardiovascular disease, according to a recent study published in Nature Communications.
The association between cardiovascular disease risk
and adverse social determinants of health was found using a novel index
developed by Northwestern Medicine scientists that integrates neighborhood
socioeconomic characteristics, food availability, physical activity facilities
and crime rates.
"This study helps move the field forward by
shifting from a focus on individual lifestyle risk factors to a more
comprehensive understanding of how neighborhood context shapes health,"
said Lifang Hou, MD, Ph.D., professor of Preventive Medicine and of Pediatrics,
who was senior author of the study.
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death
in the U.S. and worldwide, according to the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
The neighborhood and surrounding environment in which a person lives have been shown to influence their
cardiovascular health and overall risk for cardiovascular disease.
While previous work has shown how individual social
factors, such as income or education, impact cardiovascular health, few studies
have investigated how multiple neighborhood factors influence a person's
cardiovascular risk over time, according to Hou.
"We identified a critical knowledge gap: the need
for a more comprehensive way to measure neighborhood social determinants of
health and understand how these exposures, starting in early adulthood,
influence cardiovascular risk across the life course," said Hou, who is
also director of the Center for Global Oncology at the Robert J. Havey, MD
Institute for Global Health.
To address this gap, Hou's team used data from the
CARDIA (Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults) study—a longitudinal
cohort study examining how behavioral, environmental and race- and
sex-associated factors impact cardiovascular disease development and aging—to
develop a novel neighborhood social determinants of health index. The
scientists then linked this index to coronary artery calcification (CAC), a key
indicator of early cardiovascular disease, that had been measured over time.
Next, using advanced statistical and machine learning approaches, the scientists evaluated how neighborhood social determinants were
associated with cardiovascular risk while accounting for individual-level
factors. They also studied how these associations varied across different
patient populations.
They found that people who were exposed to more adverse neighborhood social determinants of health in early adulthood had a higher risk of developing CAC
later in life, and that these associations were stronger among Black
participants, as compared to white participants.
The findings show that early-life neighborhood social
determinants have lasting biological effects on cardiovascular health, which
could help inform more context-aware risk assessment in clinical care,
population- and community-level prevention strategies, and approaches to better
understand and address variation in cardiovascular risk, Hou said.
"By integrating multiple neighborhood social
determinants into a single index, we can better capture how these factors
accumulate over time and influence cardiovascular risk. Importantly, our
findings show that neighborhood social determinants are not just abstract
concepts—they are linked to measurable biological changes, such as coronary
artery calcification," Hou said.
Hou said her team aims to extend this work to other
cardiovascular outcomes, such as myocardial infarction and heart failure, and
to identify modifiable neighborhood social determinants of health that could
serve as targets for invention.
Additionally, the scientists aim to validate their
index in other patient cohorts and geographic settings and better understand
how changes in neighborhood conditions over time impact cardiovascular disease
risk.
"This study highlights the unique value of long-term longitudinal research in uncovering how early-life neighborhood environments shape health across decades, providing important evidence to inform both clinical practice and population health strategies," Hou said.
Provided by Northwestern University
Source: One hidden factor in your 20s can leave a lasting mark on your heart decades later

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