UW School of Medicine and Public Health: Late-onset asthma linked to increased heart disease, stroke risk

Contact: Gian Galassi
608-263-5561
ggalassi@uwhealth.org

Madison — People who develop asthma as adults (late-onset asthma) may also be at greater risk of developing heart disease and having a stroke, according to new research in Journal of the American Heart Association, the Open Access Journal of the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association.

“Though it’s usually not recognized as such, there are several different types of asthma, each with some unique features,” said Dr. Matthew C. Tattersall, study lead author and assistant professor of medicine at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. “We looked at the type known as late-onset asthma, which tends to be more severe and more difficult to control with medicines than asthma that begins in childhood.”

Researchers followed 1,267 adults, average age 47, without cardiovascular disease over 14 years. Average age of asthma diagnosis in the late-onset group (defined in this study as beginning at age 18 or older) was 39.5 years vs. 8.9 years in the early-onset group.

At the beginning of the study, 166 participants had asthma (111 late-onset, 55 early-onset). During the study period, researchers tracked cardiovascular events, including heart attack, stroke, heart failure, angina, cardiac revascularization and death due to cardiovascular problems. The study took into account risk factors for cardiovascular disease, such as smoking, high blood pressure, diabetes and being overweight that might bias results. Researchers found:

People with late-onset asthma were 57 percent more likely to suffer a cardiovascular event than those without asthma.
People with late-onset asthma compared to non-asthmatics were more likely to be female (67 percent vs 44 percent) and to have a higher body-mass index (BMI, 32.2 vs 29.4 kg/m2).
Participants with early-onset asthma had no difference in cardiovascular disease events compared to non-asthmatics.

Researchers speculated that a number of differences between early-onset and late-onset asthma may help explain study findings. According to them, in addition to being harder to control, late-onset asthma is often triggered by different factors, including air pollution, and often leads to a more rapid decline in lung function. Other studies have found an association between both air pollution and compromised lung function and cardiovascular disease.

Tattersall believes that the study results suggest doctors and other health care providers should pay particular attention to heart-disease risk factors in patients with late-onset asthma. “Doctors should be monitoring for high blood pressure and cholesterol closely in these patients and be aggressive in modifying any risk factors,” he said.

Patients with late-onset asthma, he added, can increase their chances of remaining heart- healthy and stroke-free by exercising, eating a healthy diet and maintaining a normal body weight.

Participants in the study are part of the ongoing Wisconsin Sleep Cohort, begun in 1988 to investigate sleep, respiratory and cardiovascular health. Study limitations include the fact that most participants were white and information about potentially important factors, such as air pollution exposure and stressful life events, was not available.

Co-authors are researcher Jodi H. Barnet, UW Hospital diagnostic specialist Claudia E. Korcarz; associate scientist Erika W Hagen,; and associate professor of population health Paul E. Peppard. The senior author is Dr. James H. Stein. Author disclosures are on the manuscript.