Multinational validation of the PREVENT and SCORE2 cardiovascular risk equations across 6.4 million individuals
Summary
The American Heart Association's PREVENT equations estimate risk of total cardiovascular disease (CVD), atherosclerotic CVD (ASCVD), and heart failure (HF) to guide lipid and blood pressure-lowering therapy in people ages 30 to 79 years in the United States. The SCORE2 risk algorithm is used to estimate CVD risk for similar purposes in people ages 40 and older in Europe. Neither set of equations has been comprehensively validated in global observational cohorts and randomized trials. Here,
Content
# Multinational validation of the PREVENT and SCORE2 cardiovascular risk equations across 6.4 million individuals
*Published: 2026 May 5*
The American Heart Association's PREVENT equations estimate risk of total
cardiovascular disease (CVD), atherosclerotic CVD (ASCVD), and heart failure
(HF) to guide lipid and blood pressure-lowering therapy in people ages 30 to 79
years in the United States. The SCORE2 risk algorithm is used to estimate CVD
risk for similar purposes in people ages 40 and older in Europe. Neither set of
equations has been comprehensively validated in global observational cohorts and
randomized trials. Here, in 44 observational cohorts and 18 randomized trials,
we assessed discrimination and calibration of the two risk algorithms across
geographical regions (North America, Europe, Asia/other, multi-region trials).
We also created scaling factors for risk prediction over 1-9 years using the
PREVENT equations, enabling shorter-term risk prediction for research purposes
or to facilitate clinical trial enrolment. Over 5.1 years of mean follow-up,
293,737 PREVENT total CVD events (fatal and non-fatal ASCVD or HF) and 258,086
SCORE2 CVD events (myocardial infarction, stroke, or cardiovascular death) were
observed among 6,422,714 and 5,437,384 individuals, respectively. Despite
differences in CVD outcome definitions, target populations and predictor
variables, overall discrimination and calibration were similar for both
equations, with generally good performance across regions, including in
multi-regional randomized trials. These findings lend support for adoption of
PREVENT or SCORE2 for cardiovascular risk stratification across diverse
settings.
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-026-04437-z