| Literature DB >> 29450037 |
Clemens Bloetzer1, Pascal Bovet2, Joan-Carles Suris1,2, Umberto Simeoni1, Gilles Paradis3, Arnaud Chiolero2,3.
Abstract
Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) are the leading cause of death worldwide. Individual detection and intervention on CVD risk factors and behaviors throughout childhood and adolescence has been advocated as a strategy to reduce CVD risk in adulthood. The U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) has recently recommended universal screening of several risk factors in children and adolescents, at odds with several recommendations of the U.S. Services Task Force and of the U.K. National Screening committee. In the current review, we discuss the goals of screening for CVD risk factors (elevated blood pressure, abnormal blood lipids, diabetes) and behaviors (smoking) in children and appraise critically various screening recommendations. Our review suggests that there is no compelling evidence to recommend universal screening for elevated blood pressure, abnormal blood lipids, abnormal blood glucose, or smoking in children and adolescents. Targeted screening of these risk factors could be useful but specific screening strategies have to be evaluated. Research is needed to identify target populations, screening frequency, intervention, and follow-up. Meanwhile, efforts should rather focus on the primordial prevention of CVD risk factors and at maintaining a lifelong ideal cardiovascular health through environmental, policy, and educational approaches.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; Cardiovascular disease; Children; Screening
Year: 2015 PMID: 29450037 PMCID: PMC5804494 DOI: 10.1186/s40985-015-0011-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Public Health Rev ISSN: 0301-0422
Issues to consider when assessing the relevance of screening for cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors in children and adolescents. Adapted from the Wilson-Jungner criteria [17]
| 1. The condition should be a major and modifiable risk factor for CVD with a known prevalence in the population | |
| 2. The absolute risk of CVD associated with a given level of risk factor should be known | |
| 3. There should be a valid, reliable, and acceptable screening test to identify the risk factor in children and adolescent | |
| 4. The best screening strategy should be known (e.g., universal versus targeted screening) | |
| 5. There should be an agreement on whom to treat; further, the benefits harms, and costs of treatment should be known (treatment early in life should be associated with a better outcome than treatment later in life, accounting for lead time bias) |
Screening of cardiovascular diseases (CVD) risk factors in children and adolescents recommended by the the U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) [13], by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) [30], and by the U.K. National Screening committee [31]
| Screening | NHLBI recommendations | USPSTF recommendations | U.K. National Screening committee |
|---|---|---|---|
| Elevated blood pressure | Annual blood pressure measurement in all children from age 3 year; targeted measurement in infants with renal/urologic/cardiac diagnosis or history of neonatal intensive care before the age of 3 year | Evidence insufficient to assess the balance of benefits and harms of screening for primary hypertension in asymptomatic children and adolescents to prevent subsequent cardiovascular disease in childhood or adulthood. | Systematic population screening not recommended |
| Dyslipidemia/abnormal blood lipids | Universal lipid screening at age 9–11 year; measurement of non-fasting or fasting lipid profile; targeted screening according to family history or other high risk condition before the age of 9–11 year | Evidence insufficient to recommend for or against routine screening for lipid disorders in infants, children, adolescents, or young adults (up to age 20). | Systematic population screening not recommended |
| Diabetes | Targeted screening at age 9–11 year following the American Diabetes Association guidelines, i.e., in overweight children and with two or more additional risk factors for diabetes [ADA 2014] | No specific recommendation for children or adolescents | No specific recommendation for children or adolescents |
| Smoking | Assessment of tobacco use beginning at 9–11 year | Recommendation that primary care clinicians provide interventions, including education or brief counseling, to prevent initiation of tobacco use among school-aged children and adolescents. No recommendation to screen for tobacco use. | No specific recommendation for children or adolescents |
Fig. 1Blood pressure would be an ideal risk marker for screening if the distribution of blood pressure in individuals having a cardiovascular disease (CVD) was very different than in individuals not having a CVD (a). However, blood pressure is a relatively weak risk factor for CVD (i.e., elevated blood pressure is a poor discriminator for sorting out individuals who will have a CVD form other individuals) as there is no large difference in the distribution of blood pressure between individuals having CVD and individuals not having a CVD (b) [14, 38]. The same is true for blood lipids