Non-cardiac birth defects and long-term risk of cardiovascular hospitalisation

 We conducted a longitudinal cohort study of 1 451 409 parous women in Quebec, Canada. We compared patients with cardiac and non-cardiac birth defects of the urinary, central nervous and other systems against patients without defects between 1989 and 2022. The main outcome was hospitalisation for coronary artery disease, ischaemic stroke and other cardiovascular outcomes during 33 years of follow-up. We computed cardiovascular hospitalisation rates and used Cox proportional hazards regression models to measure the association (HR; 95% CI) between non-cardiac defects and later risk of cardiovascular hospitalisation, adjusted for patient characteristics.

Women with any birth defect had a higher rate of cardiovascular hospitalisation than women without defects (7.0 vs 3.3 per 1000 person-years). Non-cardiac defects overall were associated with 1.61 times the risk of cardiovascular hospitalisation over time, compared with no defect (95% CI 1.56 to 1.66). Isolated urinary (HR 3.93, 95% CI 3.65 to 4.23), central nervous system (HR 3.33, 95% CI 2.94 to 3.76) and digestive defects (HR 2.39, 95% CI 2.16 to 2.65) were associated with the greatest risk of cardiovascular hospitalisation. These anomalies were associated with cardiovascular hospitalisation whether they presented alone or clustered with other defects. Nevertheless, heart defects were associated with the greatest risk of cardiovascular hospitalisation (HR 10.30, 95% CI 9.86 to 10.75).

 

The findings suggest that both cardiac and non-cardiac birth defects are associated with an increased risk of developing cardiovascular disease among parous women.

 

https://doi.org/10.1136/heartjnl-2023-323632