Early-life exposures and cardiovascular disease risk among Ghanaian migrant and home populations: the RODAM study

Publication date

2020-06

Authors

Boateng, DanielORCID 0000-0001-7568-7298
Danquah, Ina
Said-Mohamed, Rihlat
Smeeth, Liam
Nicolaou, Mary
Meeks, Karlijn
Beune, Erik
Addo, Juliet
Bahendeka, Silver
Agyei-Baffour, Peter

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

Abstract

Early-life environmental and nutritional exposures are considered to contribute to the differences in cardiovascular disease (CVD) burden. Among sub-Saharan African populations, the association between markers of early-life exposures such as leg length and sitting height and CVD risk is yet to be investigated. This study assessed the association between leg length, sitting height, and estimated 10-year atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) risk among Ghanaian-born populations in Europe and Ghana. We constructed sex-specific quintiles for sitting height and leg length for 3250 participants aged 40-70 years (mean age 52 years; men 39.6%; women 60.4%) in the cross-sectional multicenter Research on Diabetes and Obesity among African Migrants study. Ten-year risk of ASCVD was estimated using the Pooled Cohort Equations; risk ≥7.5% was defined as "elevated" CVD risk. Prevalence ratios (PR) were estimated to determine the associations between sitting height, leg length, and estimated 10-year ASCVD risk. For both men and women, mean sitting height and leg length were highest in Europe and lowest in rural Ghana. Sitting height was inversely associated with 10-year ASCVD risk among all women (PR for 1 standard deviation increase of sitting height: 0.75; 95% confidence interval: 0.67, 0.85). Among men, an inverse association between sitting height and 10-year ASCVD risk was significant on adjustment for study site, adult, and parental education but attenuated when further adjusted for height. No association was found between leg length and estimated 10-year ASCVD risk. Early-life and childhood exposures that influence sitting height could be the important determinants of ASCVD risk in this adult population.

Keywords

cardiovascular disease risk, Ghanaians, Leg length, Pooled Cohort Equation, sitting height, Medicine (miscellaneous), Journal Article

Citation

Boateng, D, Danquah, I, Said-Mohamed, R, Smeeth, L, Nicolaou, M, Meeks, K, Beune, E, Addo, J, Bahendeka, S, Agyei-Baffour, P, Mockenhaupt, F P, Spranger, J, Schulze, M B, Grobbee, D E, Agyemang, C & Klipstein-Grobusch, K 2020, 'Early-life exposures and cardiovascular disease risk among Ghanaian migrant and home populations : the RODAM study', Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease, vol. 11, no. 3, pp. 250-263. https://doi.org/10.1017/S2040174419000527