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New publication: Environmental risk factors and cardiovascular health

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New publication: Environmental risk factors and cardiovascular health

MARKOPOLO researchers under the lead of Thomas Münzel (UMC Mainz) have contributed to this consensus statement of the European Society of Cardiology.

Graphical Abstract Environmental Stressors Driving Cardiovascular Disease. Environmental determinants of cardiovascular disease: mechanistic pathways and clinical consequences. This graphical abstract illustrates the multifaceted contribution of environmental stressors to cardiovascular pathology. Climate change (e.g. temperature extremes, wildfires, hurricanes), air pollution (e.g. PM2.5, ozone, nitrogen dioxide), chemical pollution (e.g. PFAS, PCBs, BPA), soil pollution (e.g. toxic metals, microplastics, low microbial content), water pollution (e.g. heavy metals, nitrogen loading), and noise/light pollution (e.g. traffic noise, artificial lighting) act via common pathophysiological mechanisms, including oxidative stress, inflammation, and endothelial dysfunction. These processes contribute to the development and exacerbation of cardiovascular disease, manifesting clinically as hypertension, acute and chronic coronary syndromes, heart failure, stroke, and arrhythmias. The central image emphasizes the human health burden, linking environmental exposures directly to major adverse cardiovascular events. BPA, bisphenol A; COx, carbon oxides; NOx, nitrogen oxides; PCB, polychlorinated biphenyls; PFAS, per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances; PM, particulate matter; SOx, sulphur oxides.
© European Society of Cardiology 2026. All rights reserved.
Permission to publish Graphical Abstract was received by Dr. Daiber.

Summary: Environmental risk factors—air pollution, noise, heat, chemical contamination, and light pollution—are increasingly recognized as key contributors to cardiovascular disease but remain underrepresented in clinical guidelines and public health strategies. This comprehensive review, developed under the auspices of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC), synthesizes current evidence on the cardiovascular consequences of environmental exposures. Building on prior ESC recommendations on air pollution, the consensus statement extends the focus to include climate change, urban heat islands, chemical pollutants, noise, and light pollution, highlighting their shared pathophysiological mechanisms: oxidative stress, inflammation, endothelial dysfunction, and circadian disruption. Epidemiological and experimental studies confirm that these exposures exacerbate the incidence of coronary artery disease, stroke, heart failure, arrhythmias, and hypertension—even at levels below existing regulatory thresholds. It is proposed the exposome framework as a conceptual tool to understand the cumulative lifetime impact of environmental hazards on cardiovascular health. Special attention is given to vulnerable populations, including children, the elderly, socioeconomically disadvantaged groups, and patients with pre-existing cardiovascular disease. The document outlines urgent research needs, such as the need for high-resolution exposure data, exploration of gene–environment interactions and molecular pathways, and the development of real-world and mechanistic studies assessing interventions. Mitigation strategies are discussed across individual, clinical, and policy levels, with a call for heart-healthy urban design, stricter emissions legislation, and equitable access to clean environments. Cardiologists are uniquely positioned to advocate for environmental cardiovascular health, bridging the gap between science, clinical care, and policy. This statement aims to accelerate that translation by raising awareness and promoting action across disciplines.

Full text: Piepoli M, Weidinger F, Aboyans V, Abreu A, Andersen ZJ, Baneras J, Carugno M, Cerbai E, Castelvecchio S, Daiber A, Forastiere F, Gevaert S, Guida G, Hahad O, Hoffmann B, Kuzma L, Lelieveld J, Mannucci PM, Montgomery H, Newby DE, Nieuwenhuijsen M, Papadakis M, Parati G, Renzi M, Röösli M, Schnabel RB, van Laake LW, Van Linthout S, Sørensen M, Stafoggia M, Traykov V, Vaartjes I, Lüscher T, Miller MR, Münzel T. Environmental risk factors and cardiovascular health, European Heart Journal. 2026.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehag270