Pregnancy has long been recognized as a window into a woman’s future health, but new research underscores its potential as a crucial period for early cardiovascular risk assessment. A recent study conducted by Rutgers University researchers reveals that cardiovascular health during pregnancy can predict how swiftly women might develop chronic hypertension or metabolic diseases in the years following childbirth. Published in JAMA Network Open, this investigation tracked 1,225 pregnancies over roughly seven years through electronic health records to uncover these connections.
Rather than focusing solely on well-known pregnancy complications such as gestational diabetes or hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, the researchers adopted a broader lens. Led by Ellen C. Francis, an assistant professor of biostatistics and epidemiology, the team developed a pregnancy-adapted cardiovascular health score based on the American Heart Association’s Life’s Essential 8 framework. This comprehensive score integrated multiple health metrics collected during pregnancy, including body mass index, glucose regulation, blood pressure, smoking status, diet, physical activity, and sleep patterns.
The data revealed a striking pattern: women who recorded poorer cardiovascular health scores in pregnancy were diagnosed with cardiometabolic conditions far sooner after delivery compared to their counterparts with healthier scores. Intriguingly, this accelerated onset occurred even among women without any diagnosed pregnancy-related complications, indicating that traditional pregnancy diagnoses alone may overlook a substantial portion of at-risk individuals.
While the research noted fewer cardiovascular events overall, prompting cautious interpretation, its broader implications for clinical care are significant. Pregnancy represents a unique interval during which women frequently interact with healthcare systems, offering a practical opportunity for early detection of latent cardiometabolic risk. Incorporating a multidimensional cardiovascular health assessment into prenatal care could transform how risk is identified and managed long-term.
This study also challenges the conventional binary approach to risk, emphasizing that cardiovascular health operates on a continuum rather than as discrete thresholds. Slight deviations across several factors collectively heighten risk profiles and could thus serve as early warnings. Many components of the pregnancy-adapted score are already routinely measured in prenatal visits, while others, like diet and sleep, could be feasibly integrated via brief questionnaires or electronic records.
The ultimate goal surpasses assigning risk scores—it aims to bridge women to preventive care and health promotion programs postpartum. Enhanced Medicaid coverage in the extended postpartum period could play a pivotal role in ensuring these women receive sustained follow-up and appropriate interventions. Francis notes, however, that assessment alone will be insufficient without accessible, affordable, and culturally sensitive services to improve health outcomes equitably.
As research advances, pregnancy-based cardiovascular profiling may redefine preventive cardiology for women, heralding a new era of personalized, early intervention. The findings invite healthcare providers to leverage pregnancy as a vital touchpoint for cardiovascular health monitoring, potentially mitigating the burden of chronic disease well beyond delivery.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Life’s Essential 8 in Pregnancy and Time to Incident Cardiometabolic Disease Over 7 Years Follow-Up
News Publication Date: 29-Jun-2026
Web References: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2850950
References: DOI 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2026.19910
Keywords: Pregnancy, Cardiovascular disorders, Cardiometabolic disease, Hypertension, Life’s Essential 8, Prenatal health, Postpartum care

