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Cardiometabolic Risk Factors Among Adults in a Rural Amazonian Peruvian Population

  • Miguel A. Arce-Huamani
  • , Gustavo A. Caceres-Cuellar
  • , Anyela Y. Guevara-Paz
  • , Cleofe R. Lopez-Quispe
  • , Abhely K. Barzola-Blancas
  • , Valeria A. Cespedes-Atto
  • , Catherine G. Acosta-Celis
  • , Katherine Pérez-Acuña
  • , Williams Carrascal-Astola
  • , J. Smith Torres-Roman

Research output: Contribution to journalOriginal Articlepeer-review

Abstract

Background and Objectives: Cardiometabolic diseases are rising in Latin America, yet rural Amazonian populations remain understudied. We aimed to characterize the prevalence and factors associated with a simple composite cardiometabolic risk in rural Amazonian adults. Materials and Methods: We conducted an analytical cross-sectional study during community screenings in San Martín, Peru, in 2025, enrolling adults aged ≥ 18 years. The outcome was present when ≥2 biological/anthropometric alterations were identified at the same visit (hypertension, dyslipidemia, hyperglycemia, hyperuricemia, general obesity, abdominal obesity, or elevated waist-to-hip ratio). Behaviors included current tobacco use, alcohol risk (AUDIT), and physical activity (IPAQ). We summarized variables (univariate), compared groups (bivariate: chi-square; Fisher for alcohol), and fitted modified Poisson regression with robust errors to estimate prevalence ratios (PRs); variables with p ≤ 0.20 in bivariate analysis entered multivariable models. Results: We enrolled 205 adults; 70.2% met the composite outcome. In multivariable models, abdominal obesity (adjusted PR [aPR] 1.70; 95% CI 1.40–2.10), hyperglycemia (1.65; 1.25–2.17), hyperuricemia (1.38; 1.19–1.61), dyslipidemia (1.25; 1.07–1.46), and general obesity (1.21; 1.04–1.40) were independently associated with cardiometabolic risk. Hypertension (1.06; 0.88–1.29) and elevated waist-to-hip ratio (1.20; 0.88–1.63) were not. Physical activity differed crudely but showed no independent association; tobacco and alcohol were not associated. Conclusions: In this rural Amazonian population, we observed a high prevalence of composite cardiometabolic risk and found that central adiposity and metabolic derangements, not blood pressure or self-reported behaviors, were the main correlates. Simple measures such as waist circumference, fasting glucose or HbA1c, a basic lipid panel, and serum urate may help flag adults at higher cardiometabolic risk in similar low-resource primary-care settings, but prospective studies are needed to evaluate their predictive value and screening performance.

Original languageAmerican English
Article number2206
JournalMedicina (Lithuania)
Volume61
Issue number12
DOIs
StateIndexed - Dec 2025
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 by the authors.

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • Peru
  • abdominal
  • cardiovascular diseases
  • metabolic syndrome
  • obesity
  • primary health care
  • rural population

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