Poor Heart-Kidney-Metabolic Health and Genetics May Double Psoriasis Risk, Study Finds
China: A new large-scale study has found that declining cardiovascular–kidney–metabolic (CKM) health, combined with genetic susceptibility, is strongly linked to a higher risk of developing psoriasis and a shorter life expectancy for those affected by the condition. The study was led by Dr. Yuhong Zhao and colleagues from the Department of Clinical Epidemiology at Shengjing Hospital of China Medical University, and was recently published in the Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.
"Poor CKM health was linked to a higher risk of psoriasis in middle-aged and older adults, especially in those with high genetic risk, and also to shorter life expectancy in people with psoriasis," the researchers wrote.
Drawing on data from the UK Biobank, the researchers tracked 392,454 adults without psoriasis at the study's initiation. They assessed each participant's CKM health, which encompassed the presence of metabolic disorders, chronic kidney disease, and cardiovascular disease, classifying them into five progressive stages from 0 (healthy) to 4 (severely affected). Additionally, the team evaluated participants' inherited risk for psoriasis using a polygenic risk score, enabling them to examine how genetic and health-related factors might jointly influence disease development.
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