The AHA Guidelines and Scientific Statements Handbook

(vip2019) #1

Cardiovascular Disease Prevention


in Women


Kathy Berra and Nanette Kass Wenger


12


Introduction
Summary of key changes
European Guidelines for Cardiovascular Disease
Prevention in Clinical Practice
Future directions

Introduction
The American Heart Association (AHA) statistics
have, for a number of years, highlighted cardiovas-
cular disease (CVD) as leading cause of death for
American women: Hispanic, Black, Asian/Pacifi c
Islander, American Indian/Alaska native and White
women. It is well known that, in the United States,
more women than men die annually from heart-
related illnesses. Women are at great risk both for
death and for disability from heart and other dis-
eases of the vascular system [1]. The economic and
social costs of heart disease in women are enormous.
In the United States, the estimated cost associated
with CVD was $448.5 billion, including health-
care and lost productivity in 2008. It is estimated
that preventive efforts worldwide would result in
36 million fewer total lives lost due to
CVD [2].
The American Heart Association published 2007
updated guidelines for the prevention of CVD in
Women, representing the ongoing accumulation of
scientifi c evidence that supports the importance of
preventive efforts to reduce death and disability

from CVD in women [3]. These new guidelines
provide evidence-based practice recommendations
to guide appropriate lifestyle and pharmacological
interventions for women at all levels of risk.
The risks for developing heart attack and stroke
for both women and men are closely related to well-
documented cardiovascular risk factors. These
include cigarette smoking, abnormal blood lipid
levels, hypertension, diabetes, physical inactivity,
obesity, unhealthy diet, and depression [1,3–6].
Certain CVD risk factors appear to impart increased
risk for women. For example, women with diabetes
develop CVD at an earlier age than non-diabetic
women and sustain increased morbidity and mor-
tality compared to diabetic men [7,8].
Although CVD predominately affects women
over 60 years of age, the risk for developing CVD
should be addressed in women of all ages; CVD
remains a signifi cant threat for high-risk younger
women. Because of this, the new guidelines address
the importance of a woman’s “lifetime risk” which
is greatly infl uenced by well known CVD risk factors,
ethnic diversity and family history. Age plays a major
role in the Framingham short-term (10-year) risk
calculation for women, which may underestimate
risk and thereby disadvantage younger women and
women with multiple elevated CVD risk factors.
There also may be overestimation or under-
estimation of risk in non-white populations and
an underestimation of younger women with
known sub-clinical disease by the Framingham
risk score [3].
The Reynolds Risk Score, an algorithm for the
calculation of risk CVD in women, has been devel-
oped and compared to the traditional Framingham
risk score. The Reynolds Risk Score classifi ed
40–50% of all women into higher or lower risk

The AHA Guidelines and Scientific Statements Handbook
Edited by Valentin Fuster © 2009 American Heart Association
ISBN: 978-1-405-18463-2

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