A large, diverse, urban cardiovascular health e-cohort in childhood and adolescence: Protocol for the Young Hearts study
Recommended Citation
Petito LC, Zmora R, Chopra A, et al. A Large, Diverse, Urban Cardiovascular Health e-Cohort in Childhood and Adolescence: Protocol for the Young Hearts Study. JMIR Res Protoc. 2026;15:e82619. Published 2026 May 21. doi:10.2196/82619
Abstract
Background: Cardiovascular health (CVH), defined as a composite of 8 health factors and behaviors ranging from body composition to sleep duration, is strongly associated with the risk for future cardiovascular events in adults. However, there is little data on CVH among contemporary, diverse cohorts of children and adolescents.
Objective: This protocol describes the completed recruitment of a diverse pediatric e-cohort based in Chicago. We include details about ongoing longitudinal data collection for CVH behaviors, as well as neighborhood and environment-based socioeconomic factors, and linkage to electronic health records (EHRs) for direct capture of CVH factors.
Methods: Young Hearts (YH) uses a longitudinal cohort design, linking participant responses to annual electronic surveys to EHRs. Parents/guardians of children aged 0-17 years and adolescents aged 18 years are asked to complete surveys at 3 e-visits, completed annually in consecutive years. Adolescents aged 12-17 years are invited to complete surveys at each e-visit to provide self-reports of their data in addition to their parents/guardians. As adolescents reach the age of majority, they re-consent and complete their remaining e-visit data. Participants' clinical data are abstracted from EHRs at 6 health systems in Chicago and linked to their survey data. The main study outcome is the CVH score, adapted from the Life's Essential Eight framework for use in pediatric populations. We will also study component CVH behaviors and factors, each assessed using developmentally-appropriate measures, including body mass index, blood pressure, lipids, glycemic control, diet, physical activity, sleep, and smoking exposure. Our innovative study design will allow us to model trajectories of pediatric CVH from birth through 20 years of age. Funding for this study was provided by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (R01HL155864).
Results: The YH study, funded in March 2021, recruited, enrolled, and consented 7114 children and adolescents aged 0-18 years between April 2022 and February 2025. Baseline surveys have been completed by 6651 participants, of whom 3259 (49%) were female, and the mean age was 7.4 (SD 5.4) years. Data collection is still in progress, with completion anticipated in February 2027. We aim to publish results beginning in 2026.
Conclusions: This study will define the epidemiology of cardiovascular risk factors in a diverse, contemporary cohort of US children and adolescents and identify behavioral and structural individual- and area-level economic, psychosocial, and lifestyle factors associated with identified disparities. We anticipate that the YH cohort will become an ongoing resource for pediatric CVH research.
Type
Article
PubMed ID
42169535
Affiliations
Advocate Children's Medical Group Oak Lawn