Sex-specific lifetime risk of cardiovascular events: the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer-Norfolk prospective population cohort study.
Tiberiu A PanaMamas Andreas MamasNicholas J WarehamKay-Tee KhawDana K DawsonPhyo Kyaw MyintPublished in: European journal of preventive cardiology (2023)
In this population-based study, we aimed to understand the sex-specific lifetime trajectories of different heart and circulatory disorders and their relationship with death from heart disease. We included ∼24 000 participants in the analyses, who were followed up for >25 years. Men had a higher lifetime risk of heart and circulatory disorders compared with women. Heart attacks were the predominant first presentation in men until the eighth decade, while in women this was manifested as heart rhythm disorders and stroke after their sixth decade. The excess risk of death from heart disease observed in men with pre-existing heart disease was attenuated compared with those free of heart disease at baseline. In conclusion, men and women require tailored heart disease prevention efforts given the marked sex disparities in heart disease and death over the very long-term highlighted by our study.
Keyphrases
- pulmonary hypertension
- atrial fibrillation
- cardiovascular events
- heart failure
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- coronary artery disease
- middle aged
- cardiovascular disease
- depressive symptoms
- type diabetes
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- skeletal muscle
- smoking cessation
- insulin resistance
- case report
- quality improvement
- pregnant women
- blood brain barrier
- health insurance
- subarachnoid hemorrhage