Cardiovasc Diabetol. 2025 May 9;24(1):197. doi: 10.1186/s12933-025-02735-3.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Definition and staging rationale of cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic syndrome were developed. The utility of cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic construct in risk stratification and target strategies of health and behavior modifications needs to be addressed. The study aims to investigate the individual and combined associations of cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic stage and cardiovascular health (CVH) by Life's Essential 8 (LE 8) with incident cardiovascular events (CVD), and determine the distribution and contribution of domain-specific CVH across cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic stages.
METHODS: The study included 100,727 individuals in the China Cardiovascular Disease and Cancer Cohort with complete data on cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic factors and LE 8 metrics, with a median follow-up of 10.1 years. Cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic stages and CVH metrics (nicotine exposure, diet, physical activity, sleep, body mass index, blood lipids, blood pressure, blood glucose) were defined according to Presidential Advisory from the American Heart Association. Incident CVD events including cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, and stroke were validated. The Fine-Gray hazard model was used to calculate hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) of CKM stages or CVH status associated with CVD.
RESULTS: Compared with cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic stage 0, the adjusted competing HRs and 95% CIs of CVD events were 1.20 (0.95-1.51), 2.45 (1.97-3.04), 4.43 (3.53-5.58), and 5.95 (4.75-7.45) from stage 1 to stage 4, respectively. Optimal CVH status and each optimal CVH metric presented a significantly decreased risk of CVD events. Variation was observed in the association between cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic stage and CVD events with different CVH status or numbers of optimal CVH metrics. Compared with those in stage 0, Participants in stage 1 or 2 with optimal CVH no longer had elevated risks for incident CVD events. Suboptimal health factor contributed larger population attributable fractions to CVD events in cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic stage 0-2 (51.2%) than in stage 3-4 (25.2%), whereas suboptimal health behavior exhibited larger contribution in advanced stages (13.1% in stage 0-2 and 18.2% in stage 3-4).
CONCLUSIONS: The study indicated that cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic stage was associated with cardiovascular events, and optimal cardiovascular health could attenuate this risk. Health factor contributed predominantly at the early-stage, whereas health behavior exhibited consistent and slightly increased contribution along the spectrum. These findings support the utility of cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic construct and highlight the importance of target health improvement based on LE 8 framework.
PMID:40346555 | DOI:10.1186/s12933-025-02735-3