A comprehensive review/expert statement on environmental risk factors of cardiovascular disease

Cardiovascular Research

11 August 2025
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ESC Journals

Abstract

Abstract

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of mortality globally, with over 20 million deaths each year. While traditional risk factors—such as hypertension, diabetes, smoking, and poor diet—are well-established, emerging evidence underscores the profound impact of environmental exposures on cardiovascular health. Air pollution, particularly fine particulate matter (PM2.5), contributes to approximately 8.3 million deaths annually, with over half attributed to CVD. Similarly, noise pollution, heat extremes, toxic chemicals, and light pollution significantly increase the risk of CVD through mechanisms involving oxidative stress, inflammation, and circadian disruption. Recent translational and epidemiological studies show that chronic exposure to transport noise increases the risk of myocardial infarction, stroke, and heart failure. Air pollution, even below regulatory thresholds, promotes atherosclerosis, vascular dysfunction, and cardiac events. Novel threats such as micro- and nano-plastics are emerging as contributors to vascular injury and systemic inflammation. Climate change exacerbates these risks, with heatwaves and wildfires further compounding the cardiovascular burden, especially among vulnerable populations. The cumulative effects of these exposures—often interacting with behavioural and socioeconomic risk factors—are inadequately addressed in current prevention strategies. The exposome framework offers a comprehensive approach to integrating lifelong environmental exposures into cardiovascular risk assessment and prevention. Mitigation requires systemic interventions including stricter pollution standards, noise regulations, sustainable urban design, and green infrastructure. Addressing environmental determinants of CVD is essential for reducing the global disease burden. This review calls for urgent policy action and for integrating environmental health into clinical practice to safeguard cardiovascular health in the Anthropocene.

Contributors

Thomas Münzel
Thomas Münzel

Author

University Medical Center of Mainz Mainz , Germany

Mette Sørensen
Mette Sørensen

Author

Danish Cancer Institute Copenhagen , Denmark

Jos Lelieveld
Jos Lelieveld

Author

Max Planck Institute for Chemistry Mainz , Germany

Mark R Miller
Mark R Miller

Author

University of Edinburgh Edinburgh , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

Andreas Daiber
Andreas Daiber

Author

University Medical Center of Mainz Mainz , Germany

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