| Literature DB >> 29409444 |
Carissa Bonner1,2, Katy Bell3,4, Jesse Jansen3,5, Paul Glasziou3,4, Les Irwig3, Jenny Doust3,4, Kirsten McCaffery3,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: National estimates of 'heart age' by government health organisations in the US, UK and China show most people have an older heart age than current age. While most heart age calculators are promoted as a communication tool for lifestyle change, they may also be used to justify medication when clinical guidelines advocate their use alongside absolute risk assessment. However, only those at high absolute risk of a heart attack or stroke are likely to benefit from medication, and it is not always clear how heart age relates to absolute risk. This article aims to: 1) explain how heart age calculation methods relate to absolute risk guidelines; 2) summarise research investigating whether heart age improves risk communication; and 3) discuss implications for the use of medication and shared decision making in clinical practice. MAIN BODY: There is a large and growing number of heart age models and online calculators, but the clinical meaning of an older heart age result is highly variable. An older heart age result may indicate low, moderate or high absolute risk of a heart attack or stroke in the next 5-10 years, and the same individual may receive a younger or older heart age result depending on which calculator is used. Heart age may help doctors convey the need to change lifestyle, but it cannot help patients make an informed choice about medication to reduce CVD risk.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular risk; Heart age; Overdiagnosis; Overtreatment; Risk assessment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29409444 PMCID: PMC5801811 DOI: 10.1186/s12872-018-0760-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord ISSN: 1471-2261 Impact factor: 2.298
Fig. 1Two heart age calculator results for low absolute risk but older heart age (for Case 1 in Table 1: 57 year old woman with elevated cholesterol and no other risk factors; www.knowyournumbers.co.nz; www.nhs.uk/tools/pages/heartage.aspx) (2017 version)
Examples of different heart age results for the same patient using different calculators
| Patient profile | Risk factors | NZ: HF website | UK: NHS website |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Age: 57 | Older heart age (64) | Older heart age (60) |
|
| Age: 62 | Older heart age (63) | Same heart age (62) |
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| Age: 48 | Young heart age (< 48) | Older heart age (49) |
Chol ratio total/HDL cholesterol ratio, BMI body mass index, NZ HF New Zealand Heart Foundation website (www.knowyournumbers.co.nz) (2017 version), UK NHS United Kingdom National Health Service website (www.nhs.uk/tools/pages/heartage.aspx) (2017 version)
Fig. 2Example of an absolute CVD risk tool from the Mayo Clinic Statin Choice decision aid. (for 10% risk of a CVD event over the next 10 years; https://statindecisionaid.mayoclinic.org/) (2017 version)
Why caution should be used when linking heart age to medication
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