The built environment and cardiovascular disease: an umbrella review and meta-meta-analysis

Publication date

2023-11-01

Authors

Liu, Mingwei
Meijer, Paul
Lam, T. H.
Timmermans, Erik J.
Grobbee, RickORCID 0000-0003-4472-4468ISNI 0000000030206553
Beulens, JolineISNI 0000000393357801
Vaartjes, IloncaORCID 0000-0002-9951-5164ISNI 0000000392724702
Lakerveld, J

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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License

cc_by_nc

Abstract

Aims: To provide a comprehensive overview of the current evidence on objectively measured neighbourhood built environment exposures in relation to cardiovascular disease (CVD) events in adults. Methods and results: We searched seven databases for systematic reviews on associations between objectively measured long-term built environmental exposures, covering at least one domain (i.e. outdoor air pollution, food environment, physical activity environment like greenspace and walkability, urbanization, light pollution, residential noise, and ambient temperature), and CVD events in adults. Two authors extracted summary data and assessed the risk of bias independently. Robustness of evidence was rated based on statistical heterogeneity, small-study effect, and excess significance bias. Meta-meta-analyses were conducted to combine the meta-analysis results from reviews with comparable exposure and outcome within each domain. From the 3304 initial hits, 51 systematic reviews were included, covering 5 domains and including 179 pooled estimates. There was strong evidence of the associations between increased air pollutants (especially PM2.5 exposure) and increased residential noise with greater risk of CVD. Highly suggestive evidence was found for an association between increased ambient temperature and greater risk of CVD. Systematic reviews on physical activity environment, food environment, light pollution, and urbanization in relation to CVD were scarce or lacking. Conclusion: Air pollutants, increased noise levels, temperature, and greenspace were associated with CVD outcomes. Standardizing design and exposure assessments may foster the synthesis of evidence. Other crucial research gaps concern the lack of prospective study designs and lack of evidence from low-to-middle-income countries (LMICs).

Keywords

Air pollution, Built environment, Cardiovascular disease, Exposome, Noise, Umbrella review, Epidemiology, Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

Citation

Liu, M, Meijer, P, Lam, T M, Timmermans, E J, Grobbee, D E, Beulens, J W J, Vaartjes, I & Lakerveld, J 2023, 'The built environment and cardiovascular disease : an umbrella review and meta-meta-analysis', European journal of preventive cardiology, vol. 30, no. 16, pp. 1801-1827. https://doi.org/10.1093/eurjpc/zwad241