Description
Rationale and Objectives for the Working Group
A low cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk status in middle age has been linked to lower CVD morbidity and mortality, lower lifetime health care costs, increased life expectancy, and higher quality of later life (1-7). The prevalence of CVD risk factors is generally low among young adults in their twenties but increases by middle age. Cohort studies have suggested an etiologic role for weight gain in CVD risk factor progression. Moreover, observational data suggest that if weight gain is avoided, risk factor progression by middle age may be reduced. Yet, young adults are at high risk for weight gain. In US adults ages 25-74, major weight gain over 10 years, defined as increased BMI = 5 kg/m2, was highest at ages 25-34 (8). In the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) Study, even though secular trends were constant across 10 years of follow-up, aging-related weight gain was larger in the early- to mid-20s than for older ages (9). Average 15-year weight gain was 16 kg in African-American women, 14 kg in African-American men, 10 kg in white women, and 11 kg in white men, with a =15 kg gain in 48%, 41%, 26%, and 29%, respectively.
Waiting until middle age to treat CVD risk factors may not be an optimal public health approach. Drug therapy, while effective, frequently fails to meet guideline goals, may produce side effects, and adherence is often inadequate. Irreversible damage from above-optimal levels may occur prior to treatment, and having one or more risk factors may lower quality of life. Modest weight loss can reduce CVD risk factor levels and, in high-risk individuals, prevent the development of diabetes and hypertension (10-14). But despite ample evidence that short-term weight loss is achievable, if and how weight loss can be maintained long-term is less certain (15). Thus, avoiding excess weight gain during early adult years may be pivotal in preventing adverse changes in risk factors and subsequent CVD, and in reducing, delaying, or obviating the need for drug therapy later in life. In addition, interventions may establish an early foundation for maintaining lifelong healthy habits in adulthood, and as parents, young adults will serve as lifestyle role models for their children.
The objectives of the Working Group meeting were to assess the state of knowledge about preventing weight gain in young adults, identify the most relevant and compelling research questions, and discuss barriers/opportunities and design issues related to intervention research in young adult populations. This report provides a summary of findings and recommendations from the working group.