Division of Preventive Medicine, Department of Medicine and Public Health, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California.
Division of Preventive Medicine, Department of Medicine and Public Health, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California.
Am J Prev Med. 2019 Feb;56(2):262-270. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2018.09.021. Epub 2018 Dec 13.
In 2010, the American Heart Association initiated Life's Simple 7 with the goal of significantly improving cardiovascular health by the year 2020. The association of Life's Simple 7 with risk of peripheral artery disease has not been thoroughly explored.
Racially diverse individuals from the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (2000-2012) were followed for incident peripheral artery disease (ankle brachial index ≤0.90) and decline in ankle brachial index (≥0.15) over approximately 10 years of follow-up. Cox and logistic regression were used to assess associations of individual Life's Simple 7 components (score 0-2) and overall Life's Simple 7 score (score 0-14) with incident peripheral artery disease and ankle brachial index decline, respectively, adjusted for age, sex, race/ethnicity, education, and income. Analyses were performed in 2016-2018.
Of 5,529 participants, 251 (4.5%) developed incident peripheral artery disease; 419 (9.8%) of 4,267 participants experienced a decline in ankle brachial index. Each point higher for the overall Life's Simple 7 score was associated with a 17% lower rate of incident peripheral artery disease (hazard ratio=0.83, 95% CI=0.78, 0.88, p<0.001). Additionally, each point higher in overall Life's Simple 7 was associated with a 0.94-fold lower odds of decline in ankle brachial index (OR=0.94, 95% CI=0.87, 0.97, p=0.003). Four components (smoking, physical activity, glucose, and blood pressure) were associated with incident peripheral artery disease and two (smoking and glucose) with decline in ankle brachial index.
Better cardiovascular health as measured by Life's Simple 7 is associated with lower incidence of peripheral artery disease and less decline in ankle brachial index. Use of the Life's Simple 7 to target modifiable health behaviors may aid in decreasing the population burden of peripheral artery disease-related morbidity and mortality.
2010 年,美国心脏协会提出了 Life's Simple 7,目标是到 2020 年显著改善心血管健康。Life's Simple 7 与外周动脉疾病风险的关系尚未得到充分探讨。
在多民族动脉粥样硬化研究(2000-2012 年)中,来自不同种族的个体被随访以发生外周动脉疾病(踝臂指数≤0.90)和踝臂指数下降(≥0.15),随访时间约为 10 年。使用 Cox 和逻辑回归分别评估每个 Life's Simple 7 组成部分(评分 0-2)和整体 Life's Simple 7 评分(评分 0-14)与事件外周动脉疾病和踝臂指数下降的相关性,调整年龄、性别、种族/民族、教育程度和收入。分析于 2016-2018 年进行。
在 5529 名参与者中,251 名(4.5%)发生了外周动脉疾病事件;4267 名参与者中有 419 名(9.8%)踝臂指数下降。整体 Life's Simple 7 评分每增加 1 分,外周动脉疾病事件的发生率就会降低 17%(风险比=0.83,95%CI=0.78,0.88,p<0.001)。此外,整体 Life's Simple 7 评分每增加 1 分,踝臂指数下降的可能性就会降低 0.94 倍(OR=0.94,95%CI=0.87,0.97,p=0.003)。四个组成部分(吸烟、体力活动、血糖和血压)与外周动脉疾病事件相关,两个组成部分(吸烟和血糖)与踝臂指数下降相关。
Life's Simple 7 测量的心血管健康状况越好,外周动脉疾病的发病率越低,踝臂指数下降幅度越小。使用 Life's Simple 7 来针对可改变的健康行为可能有助于降低外周动脉疾病相关发病率和死亡率的人群负担。