A Proposed Pediatric Clinical Cardiovascular Health Reference Standard.

Abstract

Introduction

Clinical cardiovascular health is a construct that includes 4 health factors-systolic and diastolic blood pressure, fasting glucose, total cholesterol, and body mass index-which together provide an evidence-based, more holistic view of cardiovascular health risk in adults than each component separately. Currently, no pediatric version of this construct exists. This study sought to develop sex-specific charts of clinical cardiovascular health for age to describe current patterns of clinical cardiovascular health throughout childhood.

Methods

Data were used from children and adolescents aged 8-19 years in six pooled childhood cohorts (19,261 participants, collected between 1972 and 2010) to create reference standards for fasting glucose and total cholesterol. Using the models for glucose and cholesterol as well as previously published reference standards for body mass index and blood pressure, clinical cardiovascular health charts were developed. All models were estimated using sex-specific random-effects linear regression, and modeling was performed during 2020-2022.

Results

Models were created to generate charts with smoothed means, percentiles, and standard deviations of clinical cardiovascular health for each year of childhood. For example, a 10-year-old girl with a body mass index of 16 kg/m2 (30th percentile), blood pressure of 100/60 mm Hg (46th/50th), glucose of 80 mg/dL (31st), and total cholesterol of 160 mg/dL (46th) (lower implies better) would have a clinical cardiovascular health percentile of 62 (higher implies better).

Conclusions

Clinical cardiovascular health charts based on pediatric data offer a standardized approach to express clinical cardiovascular health as an age- and sex-standardized percentile for clinicians to assess cardiovascular health in childhood to consider preventive approaches at early ages and proactively optimize lifetime trajectories of cardiovascular health.

Department

Description

Provenance

Subjects

Humans, Cardiovascular Diseases, Cholesterol, Glucose, Body Mass Index, Risk Factors, Blood Pressure, Reference Standards, Adolescent, Child, Female, Male, Young Adult

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1016/j.amepre.2023.09.019

Publication Info

Petito, Lucia C, Megan E McCabe, Lindsay R Pool, Amy E Krefman, Amanda M Perak, Bradley S Marino, Markus Juonala, Mika Kähönen, et al. (2024). A Proposed Pediatric Clinical Cardiovascular Health Reference Standard. American journal of preventive medicine, 66(2). pp. 216–225. 10.1016/j.amepre.2023.09.019 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/34242.

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Scholars@Duke

Bradley Marino

Adjunct Professor in the Department of Pediatrics
Skinner

Asheley Cockrell Skinner

Professor in Population Health Sciences

Areas of expertise: Implementation Science, Health Services Research, Child Obesity, Pediatric Population Health, Opioids

Asheley Cockrell Skinner, PhD, is a health services researcher whose work addresses a variety of population health issues, particularly implementation of programs to improve the health of vulnerable populations. She is currently a Professor in Population Health Sciences at Duke University. She received her PhD in 2007 in Health Policy and Administration at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.  A nationally-known expert in childhood obesity, her work uses a data-driven approach to understand pediatric obesity and improve implementation of evidence-based treatment. She applies this implementation science approach to other populations, including those with opioid use disorder and people who use drugs. In addition to her many roles in research, she also currently serves as the Director of Graduate Studies for Population Health Sciences, directs multiple training programs, and actively mentors undergraduate and graduate students, fellows, and junior faculty.


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