Cocchi Camilla, Selleri Valentina, Zanini Giada, Moscucci Federica, Sciomer Susanna, Gallina Sabina, Nasi Milena, Desideri Giovambattista, Pinti Marcello, Borghi Claudio, Mattioli Anna Vittoria
Department of Ageing, Orthopedics and Rheumatology, University "Cattolica del Sacro Cuore", Rome, Italy.
National Institute for Cardiovascular Research (INRC), Bologna, Italy.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2025 Oct 8;16:1667222. doi: 10.3389/fendo.2025.1667222. eCollection 2025.
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) remains the leading cause of morbidity and mortality among women with type 2 diabetes (T2DM). The interplay between sex-specific biological factors, social determinants, and environmental exposures amplifies cardiometabolic risk across the female life course.
This manuscript explores how socioeconomic disparities, environmental pollution, chronic stress, food insecurity, and climate change synergistically increase the burden of T2DM and cardiovascular complications in women, and reviews potential preventive interventions including dietary strategies.
A comprehensive narrative review was conducted, synthesizing current evidence on the exposome, social inequities, environmental insults, and evidence-based lifestyle interventions that contribute to or mitigate the development and progression of T2DM and CVD in women.
Lower socioeconomic status, limited education, housing instability, and inadequate access to healthcare and nutritious foods profoundly affect T2DM management and CVD prevention in women. Concurrently, exposure to air pollutants (PM, NO, O), climate change-induced food insecurity, and heat-related stress further exacerbate insulin resistance, systemic inflammation, and vascular dysfunction. Life transitions such as gestational diabetes mellitus and menopause further magnify these risks. Current healthcare models insufficiently address these multilayered factors.
Effective cardiovascular prevention in women with T2DM requires a life-course approach that integrates biological transitions with environmental and social determinants to deliver sex-sensitive, stage-specific strategies.
心血管疾病(CVD)仍然是2型糖尿病(T2DM)女性发病和死亡的主要原因。性别特异性生物因素、社会决定因素和环境暴露之间的相互作用在女性生命历程中加剧了心脏代谢风险。
本文探讨社会经济差异、环境污染、慢性应激、粮食不安全和气候变化如何协同增加女性T2DM和心血管并发症的负担,并综述包括饮食策略在内的潜在预防干预措施。
进行了一项全面的叙述性综述,综合了关于暴露组、社会不平等、环境损害以及有助于或减轻女性T2DM和CVD发生和发展的循证生活方式干预措施的现有证据。
较低的社会经济地位、有限的教育、住房不稳定以及获得医疗保健和营养食品的机会不足,深刻影响女性的T2DM管理和CVD预防。同时,接触空气污染物(PM、NO、O)、气候变化导致的粮食不安全和与热相关的应激进一步加剧胰岛素抵抗、全身炎症和血管功能障碍。诸如妊娠期糖尿病和更年期等生活转变进一步放大了这些风险。当前的医疗模式未能充分应对这些多层次因素。
对T2DM女性进行有效的心血管预防需要采取生命历程方法,将生物转变与环境和社会决定因素相结合,以提供性别敏感、阶段特定的策略。