2024
A Mendelian randomization study of alcohol use and cardiometabolic disease risk in a multi‐ancestry population from the Million Veteran Program
Kember R, Rentsch C, Lynch J, Vujkovic M, Voight B, Justice A, Program M, Assimes T, Kranzler H. A Mendelian randomization study of alcohol use and cardiometabolic disease risk in a multi‐ancestry population from the Million Veteran Program. Alcohol Clinical And Experimental Research 2024, 48: 2256-2268. PMID: 39580711, PMCID: PMC11629435, DOI: 10.1111/acer.15445.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCoronary heart diseaseMR analysisMillion Veteran ProgramGenetic scoreAlcohol consumptionBody mass indexMendelian randomizationCardiometabolic diseasesVeteran ProgramAfrican AmericansAlcohol Use Disorders Identification Test-Consumption (AUDIT-C) scoresEuropean AmericansHispanic AmericansAssociation of alcohol consumptionMultivariable MR analysisAssociated with CHD riskMendelian randomization studiesRisk of cardiometabolic diseasesAssociated with alcohol consumptionCardiometabolic disease riskIncidence of coronary heart diseaseObservational studyNested Case-Control StudyReduced risk of cardiometabolic diseasesMulti-ancestry population
2023
Applications of Mobile Health Technologies to Address Cardiometabolic Health Disparities in the United States: A Systematic Review.
Cora-Cruz M, Wilson E, Vargas G, Thompson V, Enenmoh I, Goffe C, Martin-Hammond A, Purnell T. Applications of Mobile Health Technologies to Address Cardiometabolic Health Disparities in the United States: A Systematic Review. Ethnicity & Disease 2023, 33: 180-193. PMID: 38854414, PMCID: PMC11155620, DOI: 10.18865/ed.33.4.180.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMobile health technologyHealth technologiesSystematic reviewSelf-ManagementEffectiveness of mobile health technologyPromote disease self-managementCardiometabolic health disparitiesDisease Self-ManagementHealth disparity populationsCardiovascular disease risk reductionCulturally tailored approachesPopulation health equityRisk of cardiometabolic diseasesPreferred Reporting ItemsRisk reductionLong-term adherenceDisease risk reductionStudy sample sizePromote disease preventionHealth equityPhysical activityHealth disparitiesHispanic adultsDietary behaviorsUS adults
2022
Metals and risk of incident metabolic syndrome in a prospective cohort of midlife women in the United States
Wang X, Karvonen-Gutierrez C, Herman W, Mukherjee B, Park S. Metals and risk of incident metabolic syndrome in a prospective cohort of midlife women in the United States. Environmental Research 2022, 210: 112976. PMID: 35202625, PMCID: PMC9869389, DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2022.112976.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsEnvironmental risk scoreCohort of midlife womenIncident MetSMidlife womenHazard ratioRisk of incident MetSRisk of incident metabolic syndromeProspective cohortStudy of Women's HealthFree of MetSRisk of cardiometabolic diseasesIncident metabolic syndromeMetabolic syndromeImpaired fasting glucoseCox proportional hazards modelsHigh-density lipoprotein cholesterolHigh blood pressureMetS incidenceWomen's healthProportional hazards modelAbdominal obesityNation Multi-Pollutant StudyDevelopment of metabolic syndromeCardiometabolic diseasesHigh triglycerides
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