Temporal Trends and Familial Clustering of Ideal Cardiovascular Health in Parents and Offspring Over the Life Course: An Investigation Using The Framingham Heart Study.

Pubmed ID: 32486880

Pubmed Central ID: PMC7429037

Journal: Journal of the American Heart Association

Publication Date: June 16, 2020

MeSH Terms: Humans, Male, Parents, Adult, Female, Cardiovascular Diseases, Middle Aged, Massachusetts, Body Mass Index, Risk Assessment, Blood Pressure, Cross-Sectional Studies, Time Factors, Cluster Analysis, Blood Glucose, Cholesterol, Health Status, Protective Factors, Biomarkers, Adult Children, Heart Disease Risk Factors, Non-Smokers

Authors: Leveille SG, Hayman LL, Muchira JM, Gona PN, Mogos MF, Stuart-Shor E, Piano MR

Cite As: Muchira JM, Gona PN, Mogos MF, Stuart-Shor E, Leveille SG, Piano MR, Hayman LL. Temporal Trends and Familial Clustering of Ideal Cardiovascular Health in Parents and Offspring Over the Life Course: An Investigation Using The Framingham Heart Study. J Am Heart Assoc 2020 Jun 16;9(12):e016292. Epub 2020 Jun 3.

Studies:

Abstract

Background Evidence suggests familial aggregation and intergenerational associations for individual cardiovascular health (CVH) metrics. Over a 53-year life course, we examined trends and association of CVH between parents and their offspring at similar mean ages. Methods and Results We conducted a series of cross-sectional analyses of the FHS (Framingham Heart Study). Parent-offspring pairs were assessed at exams where their mean age distributions were similar. Ideal CVH was defined using 5 CVH metrics: blood pressure (&lt;120/&lt;80 mm Hg), fasting blood glucose (&lt;100 mg/dL), blood cholesterol (&lt;200 mg/dL), body mass index (&lt;25 kg/m<sup>2</sup>), and non-smoking. Joinpoint regression and Chi-squared test were used to assess linear trend; proportional-odds regression was used to examine the association between parents and offspring CVH. A total of 2637 parents were paired with 3119 biological offspring throughout 6 exam cycles. Similar patterns of declining ideal CVH with advancing age were observed in parents and offspring. Small proportions of parents (4%) and offspring (17%) achieved 5 CVH metrics at ideal levels (<i>P</i>-trend &lt;0.001). Offspring of parents with poor CVH had more than twice the odds of having poor CVH (pooled odds ratio, 2.59; 95% CI, 1.98-3.40). Over time, elevated glucose levels and obesity doubled among the offspring and were the main drivers for declining ideal CVH trends. Conclusions Parental CVH was positively associated with offspring CVH. However, intergenerational CVH gains from declining smoking rates, cholesterol, and blood pressure were offset by rising offspring obesity and elevated glucose levels. This suggests an intergenerational phenotypic shift of risk factors and the need for a family-centered approach to cardiovascular care.