Associations Between Extreme Temperatures and Cardiovascular Cause-Specific Mortality: Results From 27 Countries.

Barrak Alahmad ORCID logo; Haitham Khraishah ORCID logo; Dominic Royé; Ana Maria Vicedo-Cabrera; Yuming Guo; Stefania I Papatheodorou ORCID logo; Souzana Achilleos ORCID logo; Fiorella Acquaotta ORCID logo; Ben Armstrong ORCID logo; Michelle L Bell ORCID logo; +36 more... Shih-Chun Pan; Micheline de Sousa Zanotti Stagliorio Coelho ORCID logo; Valentina Colistro ORCID logo; Tran Ngoc Dang; Do Van Dung ORCID logo; Francesca K De' Donato ORCID logo; Alireza Entezari; Yue-Liang Leon Guo ORCID logo; Masahiro Hashizume ORCID logo; Yasushi Honda; Ene Indermitte; Carmen Íñiguez ORCID logo; Jouni JK Jaakkola; Ho Kim; Eric Lavigne ORCID logo; Whanhee Lee; Shanshan Li; Joana Madureira ORCID logo; Fatemeh Mayvaneh; Hans Orru; Ala Overcenco ORCID logo; Martina S Ragettli; Niilo RI Ryti ORCID logo; Paulo Hilario Nascimento Saldiva ORCID logo; Noah Scovronick ORCID logo; Xerxes Seposo; Francesco Sera ORCID logo; Susana Pereira Silva ORCID logo; Massimo Stafoggia ORCID logo; Aurelio Tobias ORCID logo; Eric Garshick; Aaron S Bernstein ORCID logo; Antonella Zanobetti ORCID logo; Joel Schwartz ORCID logo; Antonio Gasparrini ORCID logo; Petros Koutrakis; (2022) Associations Between Extreme Temperatures and Cardiovascular Cause-Specific Mortality: Results From 27 Countries. Circulation, 147 (1). pp. 35-46. ISSN 0009-7322 DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.122.061832
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BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death worldwide. Existing studies on the association between temperatures and cardiovascular deaths have been limited in geographic zones and have generally considered associations with total cardiovascular deaths rather than cause-specific cardiovascular deaths. METHODS: We used unified data collection protocols within the Multi-Country Multi-City Collaborative Network to assemble a database of daily counts of specific cardiovascular causes of death from 567 cities in 27 countries across 5 continents in overlapping periods ranging from 1979 to 2019. City-specific daily ambient temperatures were obtained from weather stations and climate reanalysis models. To investigate cardiovascular mortality associations with extreme hot and cold temperatures, we fit case-crossover models in each city and then used a mixed-effects meta-analytic framework to pool individual city estimates. Extreme temperature percentiles were compared with the minimum mortality temperature in each location. Excess deaths were calculated for a range of extreme temperature days. RESULTS: The analyses included deaths from any cardiovascular cause (32 154  935), ischemic heart disease (11 745 880), stroke (9 351 312), heart failure (3 673 723), and arrhythmia (670 859). At extreme temperature percentiles, heat (99th percentile) and cold (1st percentile) were associated with higher risk of dying from any cardiovascular cause, ischemic heart disease, stroke, and heart failure as compared to the minimum mortality temperature, which is the temperature associated with least mortality. Across a range of extreme temperatures, hot days (above 97.5th percentile) and cold days (below 2.5th percentile) accounted for 2.2 (95% empirical CI [eCI], 2.1-2.3) and 9.1 (95% eCI, 8.9-9.2) excess deaths for every 1000 cardiovascular deaths, respectively. Heart failure was associated with the highest excess deaths proportion from extreme hot and cold days with 2.6 (95% eCI, 2.4-2.8) and 12.8 (95% eCI, 12.2-13.1) for every 1000 heart failure deaths, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Across a large, multinational sample, exposure to extreme hot and cold temperatures was associated with a greater risk of mortality from multiple common cardiovascular conditions. The intersections between extreme temperatures and cardiovascular health need to be thoroughly characterized in the present day-and especially under a changing climate.


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