Adhering to healthy lifestyle habits associated with reduced lifetime risk of heart failure
Men who exercised regularly, drank moderately, did not
smoke, who were not overweight and had a diet that included cereal and fruits
and vegetables had a lower lifetime risk of heart failure, according to a study
in the July 22/29 issue of JAMA.
It has been unclear whether adherence to healthy lifestyle
factors, such as regular exercise and not smoking, could lead to a reduction in
lifetime risk of heart failure, according to background information in the study.
Luc Djousse, M.D., Sc.D., M.P.H., of Brigham and Women's
Hospital, Harvard Medical School and Boston Veterans Affairs Healthcare System,
Boston, and colleagues assessed the association between modifiable lifestyle factors
and the remaining lifetime risk of heart failure in a large group of men. The
study included data from 20,900 men (average age at the start of the study, 53.6
years) from the Physicians' Health Study I (1982-2008) who were apparently healthy
at baseline. Six modifiable lifestyle factors were assessed: body weight, smoking,
exercise, alcohol intake, consumption of breakfast cereals and consumption of
fruits and vegetables.
During an average follow-up of 22.4 years, 1,200 new
cases of heart failure (5.7 percent) and 4,999 confirmed deaths (23.9 percent)
occurred in the study. Compared with participants adhering to no healthy lifestyle
factors, those adhering to 4 or more factors tended to be older and had a lower
prevalence of hypertension and diabetes mellitus. Analysis indicated that overall,
the lifetime risk of heart failure was 13.8 percent at age 40 years and remained
constant through age 70; at age 80 years, the lifetime risk for heart failure
was 10.6 percent. The remaining lifetime risk of heart failure was approximately
2 percent to 4 percent higher in men with hypertension than in those without hypertension.
The researchers found that normal body weight, never
smoking, regular exercise, moderate alcohol intake, and consumption of breakfast
cereal and fruits and vegetables were individually associated with a lower lifetime
risk of heart failure compared to a corresponding undesirable behavior. There
was an inverse and graded association between the number of healthy lifestyle
factors and lifetime risk of heart failure. "For example, the lifetime risk for
heart failure was approximately 1 in 5 (21.2 percent) in men adhering to none
of the desirable lifestyle factors, compared to 1 in 10 (10.1 percent) in those
adhering to 4 or more healthy lifestyle factors," the authors write.
When restricted to body weight, smoking, and exercise,
the association between lifestyle factors and lifetime risk of heart failure persisted
in the overall population as well as in men with and without hypertension.
"Our estimate of lifetime risk of heart failure could
help public health officials allocate resources for the prevention and management
of this condition. Our findings of a low lifetime risk in men who adhere to modifiable
lifestyle factors emphasize the need for incorporation of these behaviors in prevention
strategies against heart failure at both the individual and the population level,"
the authors write.
Veronique L. Roger, M.D., M.P.H., of the Mayo Clinic,
Rochester, Minn., comments in an accompanying editorial on the two studies in
this issue of JAMA that examine the effect of lifestyle factors on heart failure
and hypertension.
"At this point, the national cost of treating cardiovascular
diseases cannot be sustained, and prevention is urgent. Because prevention can
benefit from policies aimed at creating a healthier environment, this approach
must be expanded, with obvious targets being school-based meals provided to children,
which still do not meet national dietary recommendations for good health, and
the conceptualization and restructuring of the environment to promote physical
activity. These and other public health measures should be envisioned as complementary
and synergistic with clinical care, because unhealthy societal choices that lead
to illness result in unsustainable strain on health care systems."
"The studies by Forman et al and Djousse et al underscore
that healthy lifestyle will help prevent cardiovascular disease and greatly enhance
health, which is a compelling reminder that health is the shared responsibility
of individuals and communities. This in turn implies that public health policies
and clinical care must join forces to achieve effective disease prevention."
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