Evolving strategies in cardiovascular disease prevention: 2025 American society for preventive cardiology highlights

Scritto il 17/12/2025
da Annalisa Filtz

Am J Prev Cardiol. 2025 Nov 22;24:101357. doi: 10.1016/j.ajpc.2025.101357. eCollection 2025 Dec.

ABSTRACT

The 2025 American Society for Preventive Cardiology meeting highlighted evolving strategies in cardiovascular disease prevention, spanning risk models based on traditional risk factors, emerging biomarkers, novel therapeutics, and digital health innovations. Key discussions addressed lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] and inflammation as a causal risk factor, their clinical management, and readiness for targeted therapies; optimal systolic blood pressure targets informed by recent randomized controlled trials; and ongoing debate regarding apolipoprotein B versus low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) as the primary lipid target. Advances in digital health emphasized prevention through artificial intelligence, health equity in technology, and the growing role of wearables. Imaging emerged as a central theme, with sessions highlighting its role in risk assessment, monitoring treatment response, and refining prevention strategies, especially in young adults. Sessions on women's cardiovascular health underscored female-specific risk enhancers and limitations of current risk prediction models. Additional debates addressed the use of polygenic risk scores in young adults and strategies for universal screening with LDL-C, hsCRP, and Lp(a). Heart failure prevention was highlighted as a critical frontier, with emphasis on stage-based risk stratification, early identification of subclinical disease, and targeted interventions to avert progression to symptomatic heart failure. Updates on renal denervation reaffirmed its safety, efficacy, and durability as an adjunctive therapy in resistant hypertension. Collectively, these highlights emphasize the rapid evolution of preventive cardiology, integrating precision risk stratification, digital tools, and novel therapies into routine care.

PMID:41404186 | PMC:PMC12704089 | DOI:10.1016/j.ajpc.2025.101357