Association of Patterns of Change in Adiposity With Diastolic Function and Systolic Myocardial Mechanics From Early Adulthood to Middle Age: The Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults Study.

Journal: Journal Of The American Society Of Echocardiography : Official Publication Of The American Society Of Echocardiography
Published:
Abstract

Background: The aim of this study was to determine whether long-term patterns of change in adiposity throughout young adulthood are associated with systolic and diastolic function in midlife.

Methods: Participants in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults study, a multicenter, population-based cohort, underwent repeated anthropometric assessment (body mass index [BMI], waist circumference, and waist-to-hip ratio) from examination years 0 to 25. At year 25, longitudinal, circumferential, and radial strain and tissue Doppler velocities were assessed by echocardiography. Group-based trajectory modeling was used to identify 25-year trajectories of change in anthropometric measures and to examine associations between trajectories of adiposity change and indices of cardiac mechanics.

Results: Among 3,310 participants, four distinct trajectories of BMI change were identified: stable BMI (36% of the cohort; mean ΔBMI, 1.6 kg/m2), mild increase (40%; mean ΔBMI, 6.0 kg/m2), moderate increase (18%; mean ΔBMI, 10.8 kg/m2), and major increase (6%; mean ΔBMI, 15.5 kg/m2). Trajectories of greater BMI increase were associated with lower adjusted e' velocity and higher E/e' ratio compared with the stable BMI group, independent of year 0 or year 25 BMI. Participants in increasing BMI trajectory groups compared with the stable BMI group had lower absolute longitudinal strain and greater odds of diastolic dysfunction, independent of year 0 BMI but not year 25 BMI. Similar patterns were observed for change in waist circumference and waist-to-hip ratio trajectory groups.

Conclusions: Steeper trajectories of BMI increase from young adulthood to middle age, a vulnerable period for weight gain, are independently associated with lower e' velocity and higher E/e' ratio, but not systolic dysfunction, in midlife.

Authors
Sadiya Khan, Sanjiv Shah, Laura Colangelo, Anita Panjwani, Kiang Liu, Cora Lewis, Christina Shay, David Goff, Jared Reis, Henrique Vasconcellos, Joao A Lima, Donald Lloyd Jones, Norrina Allen