Publications by authors named "F Sarti"

Introduction: Cardiometabolic diseases, a major global health concern, stem from complex interactions of lifestyle, genetics, and biochemical markers. While extensive research has revealed strong associations between various risk factors and these diseases, latent confounding and limited causal discovery methods hinder understanding of their causal relationships, essential for mechanistic insights and developing effective prevention and intervention strategies.

Methods: We introduce anchorFCI, a novel adaptation of the conservative Really Fast Causal Inference (RFCI) algorithm, designed to enhance robustness and discovery power in causal learning by strategically selecting and integrating reliable anchor variables from a set of variables known not to be caused by the variables of interest.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

: The Brazilian health system provides healthcare financed by the public and private sector, being the first designed to encompass universal healthcare coverage delivered to the population without charge to patients (Sistema Único de Saúde, SUS), whilst the second refers to healthcare coverage delivered for individuals with the capacity to pay for assistance through health insurance or out-of-pocket disbursements. Health insurance companies with beneficiaries receiving publicly financed healthcare from the SUS are required to provide the reimbursement of healthcare expenditures to the government, considering that the health insurance beneficiaries obtain deductions of income taxes designed to fund the SUS. Therefore, the study investigated patterns of healthcare utilization and public expenditure due to the use of public healthcare by beneficiaries of health insurance between 2003 and 2019.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Fruit- and vegetable-rich diets may protect against metabolic syndrome (MetS), partly due to their high polyphenol content.

Objectives: This study examined the association between dietary polyphenol intake, MetS risk, and cardiometabolic factors in the Brazilian Longitudinal Study of Adult Health (ELSA-Brasil).

Methods: A total of 6387 participants (mean age 49.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

There is a lack of empirical studies of out-of-pocket health expenditures associated with dyslipidemias, which are major cardiovascular risk factors, especially in underrepresented admixed populations. The study investigates associations of health costs with lipid traits, GWAS-derived genetic risk scores (GRSs), and other cardiometabolic risk factors. Data from the observational cross-sectional 2015 ISA-Nutrition comprised lifestyle, environmental factors, socioeconomic and demographic variables, and biochemical and genetic markers related to the occurrence of cardiometabolic diseases.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Recent studies suggest that plasma inflammatory biomarker concentrations may represent valuable indicators for the diagnosis and prognosis of mental disorders. At the same time, metabolic alterations may contribute to the development and progression of systemic low-grade inflammation. : This study evaluated the association between plasma inflammatory biomarkers and common mental disorders (CMD), exploring the relationship between metabolic biomarkers, metabolic syndrome (MetS), and inflammatory biomarkers in younger and older adults.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF