Affiliation:
1. Department of Epidemiology University of Pittsburgh PA
2. Departments of Psychiatry and Psychology University of Pittsburgh PA
3. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine Department of Internal Medicine University of Alabama at Birmingham AL
4. Department of Epidemiology Emory University Rollins School of Public Health Atlanta GA
5. Departments of Neurology and Epidemiology & Population Health Albert Einstein College of Medicine Bronx NY
Abstract
Background
The extent to which cardiovascular disease (
CVD
) risk factors across the menopause explain racial/ethnic differences in subclinical vascular disease in late midlife women is not well documented and was explored in a multi‐ethnic cohort.
Methods and Results
Participants (n=1357; mean age 60 years) free of clinical
CVD
from the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation had common carotid artery intima‐media thickness, interadventitial diameter, and carotid plaque presence assessed by ultrasonography on average 13.7 years after baseline visit. Early to late midlife time‐averaged cumulative burden of traditional
CVD
risk factors calculated using serial measures from baseline to the ultrasound visit were generally less favorable in black and Hispanic women compared with white and Chinese women, including education and smoking status and time‐averaged cumulative blood pressure, high‐density lipoprotein cholesterol, and fasting insulin. Independent of these risk factors,
BMI
, and medications, common carotid artery intima‐media thickness was thicker in black women, interadventitial diameter was wider in Chinese women, yet plaque presence was lower in black and Hispanic women compared with white women.
CVD
risk factor associations with subclinical vascular measures did not vary by race/ethnicity except for high‐density lipoprotein cholesterol on common carotid artery intima‐media thickness; an inverse association between high‐density lipoprotein cholesterol and common carotid artery intima‐media thickness was observed in Chinese and Hispanic but not in white or black women.
Conclusions
Race/ethnicity did not particularly moderate the association between traditional
CVD
risk factors measured across the menopause transition and late midlife subclinical vascular disease. Unmeasured socioeconomic, cultural, and nontraditional biological risk factors likely play a role in racial/ethnic differences in vascular health and merit further exploration.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
14 articles.
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