New Target for Heart Disease Screening in Middle-Aged Black Women

New Target for Heart Disease Screening in Middle-Aged Black Women

[Editor’s Note: This article was contributed by Allison Hydzik at UPMC.]

According to a recent study conducted by the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health and School of Medicine, middle-aged African American women have higher levels of a protein in their blood, which has been associated as a predictor of heart disease, than their Caucasian counterparts—even after other factors like obesity are taken into consideration.

The finding, reported in Menopause, suggested routine blood testing of black menopausal women may be warranted to determine their heart disease risk and, potentially, when to start therapies like aspirin and statins. The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

“Multiple previous studies have shown that black women are at higher risk for heart disease than white women; however, guidelines for assessing cardiovascular disease risk in asymptomatic adults do not recommend selective race- or ethnic-based risk-assessment,” said lead author Norman C. Wang, MD, MS, assistant professor in Pitt’s School of Medicine. “Our study revealed for the first time that, in black but not white women going through menopause, higher levels of an easily measured risk factor for heart disease are associated with higher amounts of early atherosclerosis, even after accounting for other risk factors for heart disease. A clinical trial to determine whether routine screening in this population can save lives may be warranted.”

Wang and his colleagues, including Karen A. Matthews, PhD, Emma J.M. Barinas-Mitchell, PhD, and Chung-Chou H. Chang, PhD, all of Pitt., examined medical records, blood samples and heart CT scans for 372 women of both racial backgrounds from Pittsburgh and Chicago enrolled in the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN). The women averaged just over 51 years old, were not on hormone replacement therapy and had no known heart disease when enrolled.

The researchers looked at blood levels of five biomarkers linked to inflammation; all of which were associated with coronary artery calcification, a predictor of heart disease that is measured with a heart CT scan. When the researchers then took into account the participants’ body mass index (BMI), a measure of overall body fat, they found that obesity was a key factor linking most of the elevated inflammation biomarkers and coronary artery calcification.

Regardless of BMI, however, black women with higher levels of one particular biomarker, C-reactive protein, were more likely to have coronary artery calcification than white women. In fact, black women with coronary artery calcification had an average level of C-reactive protein in their blood that was almost double that of their white counterparts.

“We clearly demonstrated that obesity, inflammation biomarkers and coronary artery calcification are linked for both black and white mid-life women, further emphasizing the need to promote lifestyle changes to combat obesity at mid-life when women are subjected to many physiological and biological changes that could potentially increase their risk for heart disease,” said senior author Samar El Khoudary, PhD, MPH, assistant professor in Pitt Public Health’s department of epidemiology. “Future research should build on our findings regarding black women and C-reactive protein by testing similar associations over time, which could potentially yield interventions that can help these women avoid developing heart disease.”

The researchers noted that their study only looked at black and white women, so the results cannot be generalized to other racial or ethnic groups.

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