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The main methods of investigation of cardiovascular system. Cardiovascular disease ? • Endocardium : valvular heart disease, infective endocarditis • Myocardium : Ischemic heart disease, myocarditis/cardiomyopathy • Pericardial disease : pericarditis, pericardial effusion • Disease of aorta : aortic aneurysm, aortic dissection Chest Xray • Cardiomegaly • pulmonary vasculature – Pulmonary hypertension – Pulmonary congestion – Shunt ASD,VSD,MS,congestive heart failure Aortic dissection/aneurysm EKG : Assessment of CVD • For Dx IHD : myocardial ischemia, myocardial injury,myocardial infarction ( acute,recent,old ) • For Dx cardiac arrhythmias • For Dx chamber enlargement & hypertrophy • For Dx pericarditis EKG : Assessment IHD • EKG could be normal in one-half of patients with chronic stable angina ( sensitivity about 50% ) • EKG of IHD : inverted T wave, ST depression, abnormal Q wave (old MI ) • EKG of acute MI : ST elevation, inverted T and Q wave Abnormal EKG in absent of clinical heart disease • QS complex in AVL,V1-2 . QS or QR complex in III,AVF. • Tall R inV1 and V2. High voltage R wave over left ventricle • ST elevation : early repolarization • Inverted T wave : nonspecific T wave changes Abnormal EKG in absent of clinical heart disease • Nonspecific ST and T wave changes are the most common EKG abnormality • About 50% of abnormal tracings recorded in a general hospital population • most common cause of “ iatrogenic EKG heart disease” • must always be correlated with all available clinical and laboratory information Information from Echocardiography • Cardiac valves morphology & chamber enlargement , hypertrophy ? • LV systolic and diastolic function & regional wall motion abnormality • Valves function : stenosis & regurgitation • Pericardial effusion, vegetation & thrombus • congenital heart disease : ASD,VSD,PDA • Aortic dissection Echocardiography in IHD • Assess global LV function and RWMA ( abnormal in case with old MI ) • Could be normal in chronic stable angina • hypokinesia : myocardial ischemia • akinesia & dyskinesia : myocardium infarction • For Dx IHD • For assess IHD : high / low risk • Overall sensitivity about 75% ( negative test not excluded ) • Limitation in young,middle age female, abnormal baseline EKG ( false positive is high ) Exercise stress test • Specificity is less in women than men • lower prevalence and extent of CAD in young and middle-aged women & catecholamine effect • LVH, LBBB, WPW syndrome : need exercise or pharmacologic imaging study Exercise stress test • Result of EST – Positive VS Negative – Equivocal – Inadequate – assess functional capacity : low,moderate or high workload – assess hemodynamic response Exercise stress test • Assess myocardial ischemia • In case of old MI – EST could be positive or negative – Negative EST not exclude old MI Exercise or pharmacologic stress echocardiography • Higher specificity • More extensive evaluation of cardiac anatomy and function • Greater convenience,efficacy and availability • Lower cost ( compare with stress perfusion imaging ) Stress perfusion imaging • • • • MIBI scan / Thallium Higher technical success rate Higher sensitivity Better accuracy in evaluating possible ischemia when multiple rest LV wall motion abnormalities are present Coronary angiography • • • • • • Invasive test Gold standard for Dx IHD single or double or tripple vessel disease Left main disease ? % of stenosis Assess LV function by LV ventriculogram Other tests for assess CVD • Holter’s monitoring : assess symptoms possibly related to cardiac arrhythmias eg. Sick sinus syndrome • Tilt table test : for Dx vagovagal syncope • Electrophysiologic study in case of cardiac arrhythmias • Ambulatory BP monitoring : for exclude whitecoat hypertension • CT scan for Dx aortic dissection Cardiac markers in acute coronary syndrome/acute MI • Cardiac troponins – Cardiac troponin T (cTnT) – Cardiac troponin I (cTnI) • CK-MB • CK-MB isoforms • Myoglobin Assessment for disease severity and prognosis • • • • Ischemic heart disease congenital heart disease valvular heart disease Hypertension Is there clinical evidence that novel risk markers predict future coronary events and provide additional predictive information beyond traditional risk factors? Fibrinogen and Atherosclerosis • • • • • • • Promotes atherosclerosis Essential component of platelet aggregation Relates to fibrin deposited and the size of the clot Increases plasma viscosity May also have a proinflammatory role Measurement of fibrinogen, incl. Test variability, remains difficult. No known therapies to selectively lower fibrinogen levels in order to test efficacy in CHD risk reduction via clinical trials. Fibrinogen and CHD Risk: Epidemiologic Studies • Recent meta-analysis of 18 studies involving 4018 CHD cases showed a relative risk of CHD of 1.8 (95% CI 1.6-2.0) comparing the highest vs lowest tertile of fibrinogen levels (mean .35 vs. .25 g/dL) • ARIC study in 14,477 adults aged 45-64 showed relative risks of 1.8 in men and 1.5 in women, attenuated to 1.5 and 1.2 after risk factor adjustment. • Scottish Heart Health Study of 5095 men and 4860 women showed fibrinogen to be an independent risk factor for new events--RRs 2.23.4 for coronary death and all-cause mortality. Fibrinogen and CHD Risk Factors • Fibrinogen levels increase with age and body mass index, and higher cholesterol levels • Smoking can reversibly elevated fibrinogen levels, and cessation of smoking can lower fibrinogen. • Those who exercise, eat vegetarian diets, and consume alcohol have lower levels. Exercise may also lower fibrinogen and plasma viscosity. • Studies also show statin-fibrate combinations (simvastatinciprofibrate) and estrogen therapy to lower fibrinogen. P. Ridker CRP vs hs-CRP • CRP is an acute-phase protein produced by the liver in response to cytokine production (IL-6, IL-1, tumor necrosis factor) during tissue injury, inflammation, or infection. • Standard CRP tests determine levels which are increased up to 1,000fold in response to infection or tissue destruction, but cannot adequately assess the normal range • High-sensitivity CRP (hs-CRP) assays (i.e. Dade Behring) detect levels of CRP within the normal range, levels proven to predict future cardiovascular events. C-Reactive Protein: Risk Factor or Risk Marker? • CRP previously known to be a marker of high risk in cardiovascular disease • More recent data may implicate CRP as an actual mediator of atherogenesis • Multiple hypotheses for the mechanism of CRP-mediated atherogenesis: – Endothelial dysfunction via ↑ NO synthesis – ↑LDL deposition in plaque by CRP-stimulated macrophages Prevention Cohorts Kuller MRFIT 1996 CHD Death Ridker PHS 1997 MI Ridker PHS 1997 Stroke Tracy CHS/RHPP 1997 CHD Ridker PHS 1998,2001 PAD Ridker WHS 1998,2000,2002 CVD Koenig MONICA 1999 CHD Roivainen HELSINKI 2000 CHD Mendall CAERPHILLY 2000 CHD Danesh BRHS 2000 CHD Gussekloo LEIDEN 2001 Fatal Stroke Lowe SPEEDWELL 2001 CHD Packard WOSCOPS 2001 CV Events* Ridker AFCAPS 2001 CV Events* Rost FHS 2001 Stroke Pradhan WHI 2002 MI,CVD death Albert PHS 2002 Sudden Death Sakkinen HHS 2002 MI 0 Ridker PM. Circulation 2003;107:363-9 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 Relative Risk (upper vs lower quartile) 6.0 hs-CRP Adds to Predictive Value of TC:HDL Ratio in Determining Risk of First MI Relative Risk 5,0 4,0 3,0 2,0 1,0 0,0 High Medium High Medium Low Total Cholesterol:HDL Ratio Ridker et al, Circulation. 1998;97:2007–2011. Low Risk Factors for Future Cardiovascular Events: WHS Lipoprotein(a) Homocysteine IL-6 TC LDLC sICAM-1 SAA Apo B TC: HDLC hs-CRP hs-CRP + TC: HDLC 0 1.0 2.0 4.0 6.0 Relative Risk of Future Cardiovascular Events Ridker et al, N Engl J Med. 2000;342:836-43 Is there clinical evidence that inflammation can be modified by preventive therapies? Percent with CRP 0.22 mg/dL Elevated CRP Levels in Obesity: NHANES 1988-1994 25 20 15 10 5 0 Normal Overweight Visser M et al. JAMA 1999;282:2131-2135. Obese Effects of Weight Loss on CRP Concentrations in Obese Healthy Women 83 women (mean BMI 33.8, range 28.2-43.8 kg/m2) placed on very low fat, energy-restricted diet (6.0 MJ, 15% fat) for 12 weeks Baseline CRP positively associated with BMI (r=0.281, p=0.01) CRP reduced by 26% (p<0.001) Average weight loss 7.9 kg, associated with change in CRP Change in CRP correlated with change in TC (r=0.240, p=0.03) but not changes in LDL-C, HDL-C, or glucose At 12 weeks, CRP concentration highly correlated with TG (r=0.287, p=0.009), but not with other lipids or glucose Heilbronn LK et al. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 2001;21:968-970. Effect of HRT on hs-CRP: the PEPI Study hs-CRP (mg/dL) 3.0 CEE + MPA cyclic CEE + MPA CEE + MP continuous CEE 2.0 Placebo 1.0 0 12 Months 36 Cushman M et al. Circulation 1999;100:717-722. 1999 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. Long-Term Effect of Statin Therapy on hs-CRP: Placebo and Pravastatin Groups 0.25 Placebo Median hs-CRP Concentration (mg/dL) 0.24 0.23 -21.6% (P=0.004) 0.22 0.21 0.20 Pravastatin 0.19 0.18 Baseline Ridker et al, Circulation. 1999;100:230-235. 5 Years hs-CRP (mg/L) Effect of Statin Therapy on hs-CRP Levels at 6 Weeks 6 *p<0.025 vs. Baseline 5 * 4 * * 3 2 1 0 Baseline Prava Simva Atorva (40 mg/d) (20 mg/d) (10 mg/d) Jialal I et al. Circulation 2001;103:1933-1935. 2001 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. AFCAPS/TEXCAPS showed statins to be effective in lowering risk in the setting of normal LDL-C, but only when inflammation was present AFCAPS/TexCAPS Low LDL Subgroups LowLDL, LDL,Low LowhsCRP hsCRP Low [A] LowLDL, LDL,High HighhsCRP hsCRP Low [B] 0.50.5 StatinEffective Effective Statin 1.01.0 RR 2.02.0 StatinNot NotEffective Effective Statin However, while intriguing and of potential public health importance, the observation in AFCAPS/TexCAPS that statin therapy might be effective among those with elevated hsCRP but low cholesterol was made on a post hoc basis. Thus, a large-scale randomized trial of statin therapy was needed to directly test this hypotheses. Ridker et al, New Engl J Med 2001;344:1959-65 A Randomized Trial of Rosuvastatin in the Prevention of Cardiovascular Events Among 17,802 Apparently Healthy Men and Women With Elevated Levels of C-Reactive Protein (hsCRP): The JUPITER Trial Paul Ridker*, Eleanor Danielson, Francisco Fonseca*, Jacques Genest*, Antonio Gotto*, John Kastelein*, Wolfgang Koenig*, Peter Libby*, Alberto Lorenzatti*, Jean MacFadyen, Borge Nordestgaard*, James Shepherd*, James Willerson, and Robert Glynn* on behalf of the JUPITER Trial Study Group An Investigator Initiated Trial Funded by AstraZeneca, USA * These authors have received research grant support and/or consultation fees from one or more statin manufacturers, including Astra-Zeneca. Dr Ridker is a co-inventor on patents held by the Brigham and Women’s Hospital that relate to the use of inflammatory biomarkers in cardiovascular disease that have been licensed to Dade-Behring and AstraZeneca. Ridker et al NEJM 2008 Justification for the Use of statins in Prevention: an Intervention Trial Evaluating Rosuvastatin To investigate whether rosuvastatin 20 mg compared to placebo would decrease the rate of first major cardiovascular events among apparently healthy men and women with LDL < 130 mg/dL (3.36 mmol/L) who are nonetheless at increased vascular risk on the basis of an enhanced inflammatory response, as determined by hsCRP > 2 mg/L. To enroll large numbers of women and individuals of Black or Hispanic ethnicity, groups for whom little data on primary prevention with statin therapy exists. JUPITER Trial Design JUPITER Multi-National Randomized Double Blind Placebo Controlled Trial of Rosuvastatin in the Prevention of Cardiovascular Events Among Individuals With Low LDL and Elevated hsCRP Rosuvastatin 20 mg (N=8901) No Prior CVD or DM Men >50, Women >60 LDL <130 mg/dL hsCRP >2 mg/L 4-week run-in Placebo (N=8901) MI Stroke Unstable Angina CVD Death CABG/PTCA Argentina, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Denmark, El Salvador, Estonia, Germany, Israel, Mexico, Netherlands, Norway, Panama, Poland, Romania, Russia, South Africa, Switzerland, United Kingdom, Uruguay, United States, Venezuela Ridker et al, Circulation 2003;108:2292-2297. Ridker et al NEJM 2008 JUPITER Baseline Blood Levels (median, interquartile range) Rosuvastatin (N = 8901) Placebo (n = 8901) hsCRP, mg/L 4.2 (2.8 - 7.1) 4.3 (2.8 - 7.2) LDL, mg/dL 108 (94 - 119) 108 (94 - 119) HDL, mg/dL 49 (40 – 60) 49 (40 – 60) Triglycerides, mg/L 118 (85 - 169) 118 (86 - 169) Total Cholesterol, mg/dL 186 (168 - 200) 185 (169 - 199) Glucose, mg/dL 94 (87 – 102) 94 (88 – 102) HbA1c, % 5.7 (5.4 – 5.9) 5.7 (5.5 – 5.9) All values are median (interquartile range). [ Mean LDL = 104 mg/dL ] JUPITER Ridker et al NEJM 2008 140 60 120 50 100 80 60 40 20 LDL decrease 50 percent at 12 months HDL (mg/dL) LDL (mg/dL) Effects of rosuvastatin 20 mg on LDL, HDL, TG, and hsCRP 0 20 10 HDL increase 4 percent at 12 months 140 120 4 3 2 hsCRP decrease 37 percent at 12 months 0 TG (mg/dL) hsCRP (mg/L) 30 0 5 1 40 100 80 60 40 20 TG decrease 17 percent at 12 months 0 0 12 24 Months 36 48 0 12 24 Months 36 48 JUPITER Ridker et al NEJM 2008 Primary Trial Endpoint : MI, Stroke, UA/Revascularization, CV Death 0.08 HR 0.56, 95% CI 0.46-0.69 P < 0.00001 Placebo 251 / 8901 0.04 0.06 - 44 % Rosuvastatin 142 / 8901 0.00 0.02 Cumulative Incidence Number Needed to Treat (NNT5) = 25 0 1 2 4 Follow-up (years) Number at Risk Rosuvastatin Placebo 3 8,901 8,901 8,631 8,621 8,412 8,353 6,540 6,508 3,893 3,872 1,958 1,963 1,353 1,333 983 955 544 534 157 174 Ridker et al NEJM 2008 JUPITER Secondary Endpoint – All Cause Mortality HR 0.80, 95%CI 0.67-0.97 P= 0.02 0.06 Placebo 247 / 8901 0.04 0.03 0.02 Rosuvastatin 198 / 8901 0.00 0.01 Cumulative Incidence 0.05 - 20 % 0 Number at Risk Rosuvastatin 8,901 Placebo 8,901 1 2 3 4 Follow-up (years) 8,847 8,852 8,787 8,775 6,999 6,987 4,312 4,319 2,268 2,295 1,602 1,614 1,192 1,196 683 684 227 246 JUPITER Ridker et al NEJM 2008 Implications for Primary Prevention A simple evidence based approach to statin therapy for primary prevention. Among men and women age 50 or over : If diabetic, treat If LDLC > 160 mg/dL, treat If hsCRP > 2 mg/L, treat AHA / CDC Scientific Statement Markers of Inflammation and Cardiovascular Disease: Applications to Clinical and Public Health Practice Circulation January 28, 2003 “Measurement of hs-CRP is an independent marker of risk and may be used at the discretion of the physician as part of global coronary risk assessment in adults without known cardiovascular disease. Weight of evidence favors use particularly among those judged at intermediate risk by global risk assessment”. Clinical Application of hs-CRP for Cardiovascular Risk Prediction 1 mg/L Low Risk 3 mg/L Moderate Risk Ridker PM. Circulation 2003;107:363-9 10 mg/L High Risk >100 mg/L Acute Phase Response Ignore Value, Repeat Test in 3 weeks CRP Improves Net Reclassification Index • From the Physicians Health Study: hs CRP and parental history improved risk prediction 5.3% overall and 14.2% for patients at intermediate risk by traditional risk scores (both P<0.001) (Ridker et al., Circulation 2008) • Framingham Heart Study: hs-CRP improved prediction of cardiovascular disease by 5.6% (P=0.014) and of coronary heart disease by 11.8% (P=0.009) (Wilson et al. Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes 2008). Homocysteine • Intermediary amino acid formed by the conversion of methionine to cysteine • Moderate hyperhomocysteinemia occurs in 5-7% of the population • Recognized as an independent risk factor for the development of atherosclerotic vascular disease and venous thrombosis • Can result from genetic defects, drugs, vitamin deficiencies, or smoking Homocysteine • Homocysteine implicated directly in vascular injury including: – – – – Intimal thickening Disruption of elastic lamina Smooth muscle hypertrophy Platelet aggregation • Vascular injury induced by leukocyte recruitment, foam cell formation, and inhibition of NO synthesis Homocysteine • Elevated levels appear to be an independent risk factor, though less important than the classic CV risk factors • Screening recommended in patients with premature CV disease (or unexplained DVT) and absence of other risk factors • Treatment includes supplementation with folate, B6 and B12 Current Biomarkers for ACS • Biomarker assessment of high risk patients may include: – – – – – – – Inflammatory cytokines Cellular adhesion molecules Acute-phase reactants Plaque destabilization and rupture biomarkers Biomarkers of ischemia Biomarkers of myocardial stretch (BNP) Biomarkers of myocardial necrosis (Troponin, CK-MB, Myoglobin) Apple Clinical Chemistry March 2005 Progression of Biomarkers in ACS STABLE CAD MPO CRP IL-6 PLAQUE RUPTURE MPO ICAM sCD40L PAPP-A UA/NSTEMI MPO D-dimer IMA FABP STEMI TnI TnT Myoglobin CKMB Inflammation has been linked to the development of vulnerable plaque and to plaque rupture ACS, acute coronary syndrome; UA, unstable angina; NSTEMI, non–ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction; STEMI, ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction Adapted from: Apple Clinical Chemistry March 2005 Stefan Blankenberg, MD; Renate Schnabel, MD; Edith Lubos, MD, et al., Myeloperoxidase Early Indicator of Acute Coronary Syndrome and Predictor of Future Cardiovascular Events 2005 History: Troponin • Troponin I first described as a biomarker specific for AMI in 19871; Troponin T in 19892 • Now the biochemical “gold standard” for the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction via consensus of ESC/ACC 1 Am Heart J 113: 1333-44 2 J Mol Cell Cardiol 21: 1349-53 Troponins • Elevated serum levels are an independent predictor of prognosis, morbidity and mortality • Meta-analysis of 21 studies involving ~20,000 patients with ACS revealed that those with elevated serum troponin had 3x risk of cardiac death or reinfarction at 30 days1 1 Am J Heart (140): 917 All-Cause Mortality by Cardiac Troponin T (n=733) 100 cTnT <0.01 g/L 80 Cumulative survival (%) cTnT 0.04 g/L 60 40 cTnT 0.04 to 0.10 g/L 20 cTnT 0.10 g/L 0 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 Time since blood draw (years) Patients at risk (no.) Baseline cTnT <0.01 g/L 132 cTnT 0.01 to <0.04 g/L 214 cTnT 0.04 to <0.10 g/L 239 cTnT 0.10 g/L 148 Circulation 106:2944, 2002 1 yr 106 166 180 93 2 yr 25 41 63 20 2.5 yr 12 15 18 8 CP1090800-14 cTnT and Survival (Rancho Bernardo) All Subjects 100 80 Survival (%) Survival (%) 100 Subjects Without Baseline CHD TnT undetectable 60 40 80 TnT undetectable 60 TnT 0.01 ng/mL 40 TnT 0.01 ng/mL P<0.001 P<0.001 20 20 0 2 4 Years 6 8 0 2 4 6 8 Years Daniels et al: JACC 52:450, 2008 CP1322078-9 BNP • BNP has also shown utility as a prognostic marker in acute coronary syndrome • It is associated with increased risk of death at 10 months as concentration at 40 hours post-infarct increased • Also associated with increased risk for new or recurrent MI BNP as a Predictor of Risk in Asymptomatic Adults: The Framingham Heart Study Wang et al., NEJM 2004 Association of increasing BNP levels and outcomes End point Hazard ratio for 1 SD increment in log BNP value Death 1.27 First major CV 1.28 event HF 1.77 Atrial 1.66 fibrillation SD=standard Stroke or TIA deviation 1.53 p 0.009 0.03 <0.001 <0.001 0.002 Wang TJ et al. N1.1 Engl J Med 2004; 350:655-63. CHD event 0.37 B-Type Natriuretic Peptides and CVD Risk (Circulation 2009; 120: 2177-2187) • Meta-analysis of 40 long-term prospective studies involving 87,474 patients. • Highest vs. lowest tertile, adjusted RR=2.82 (2.40-3.33). • RRs similar for BNP (2.89) or NT-pro BNP (2.82) and in general populations (2.68), increased risk factors (3.35), and stable CVD (2.60). • Modest improvements in risk discrimination (increase in C-statistic of 0.01 to 0.1). Conjoint Effects of cTnT and NT-proBNP on Prognosis (Rancho Bernardo) All Subjects 100 Subjects Without Baseline CHD 100 Low NT-proBNP (n=667) 80 60 Survival (%) Survival (%) Low NT-proBNP (n=758) High NT-proBNP, low TnT (n=171) High NT-proBNP, high TnT (n=27) 40 80 60 High NT-proBNP, low TnT (n=122) 40 High NT-proBNP, high TnT (n=16) 20 P<0.001 for all comparisons 0 2 4 Years 6 P<0.001 for all comparisons 20 8 0 2 4 6 8 Years Daniels et al: JACC 52:450, 2008 CP1322078-12 • MPO is an enzymeMyeloperoxidase that aids white blood cells in destroying bacteria and viral particles • MPO catalyzes the conversion of hydrogen peroxide and chloride ions (Cl-) into hypochlorous acid • Hypochlorous acid is 50 times more potent in microbial killing than hydrogen peroxide • MPO is released in response to infection and inflammation • EPIC Norfolk Study showed its predictive value for future Sugiyama Am J Pathology 2001 Summary of MPO and ACS • MPO leads to oxidized LDL cholesterol – Oxidized LDL is phagocytosed by macrophages producing foam cells* • MPO leads to the consumption of nitric oxide – Vasoconstriction and endothelial dysfunction • MPO can cause endothelial denuding and superficial platelet aggregation • MPO indicates activated immune cells – Activated immune cells and inflammation lead to unstable plaque* • Inflammatory plaque is inherently less stable – Thin fibrous cap/fissured/denuded Brennan, NEJM 2003 *Hansson, NEJM 2005 MPO and MI in Asymptomatic Subjects: EPICNORFOLK Death or MI (%) 20 15 1st tertile 2nd tertile 3rd tertile 10 5 0 24 hours 72 hours Tertile 1 MPO < 222 ug/L Tertile 2 MPO 222 – 350 ug/L Tertile 3 MPO > 350 ug/L Baldus, et al. Circulation 2003;108: 1440-5. 30 days 6 months Figure 2 MPO and CVD Event Risk (%) 5,0 4,5 4,0 3,5 3,0 2,5 2,0 1,5 1,0 0,5 0,0 4,9 4,3 2,5 2,2 MPO Quartile 1st 2nd 3rd 4th P-trend = 0.05 (Wong et al. JACC Cardiovasc Img 2009 ) Figure 3 CVD Events (%) Combined MPO-CAC Groups and CVD Event Risk (%) 14,0% 12,0% 10,0% 8,0% 6,0% 4,0% 2,0% 0,0% 14,0% 7,1% CAC>=100 3,2% 0,3% MPO<257pm 3,9% 0,9% CAC 10-99 CAC 0-9 MPO>=257pm Log-rank test for trend P<0.0001; Wong et al., JACC Cardiovasc Img 2009 The Future of Cardiac Biomarkers • Many experts are advocating the move towards a multimarker strategy for the purposes of diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment design • As the pathophysiology of ACS is heterogeneous, so must be the diagnostic strategies A Multimarker Approach Should Focus on Multiple Mechanisms / Pathologies Circulation 108: 250-252 An Integrated Strategy Multiple Biomarkers Intermediate Risk Non-redundant pathobiology Low Risk Potential Components of a “Multimarker” Approach Daniels LB. Curr CV Risk Rep 2009. Multiple Biomarkers for Prediction of CV Death in Older Adults Variables C statistic P value Established risk factors 0.66 Ref + cTnI 0.72 0.002 + NT-proBNP 0.75 <0.001 + cystatin C 0.69 0.07 + CRP 0.69 0.07 + all biomarkers 0.77 <0.001 Zethelius B et al. N Engl J Med 2008;358:2107-2116 Malmö, Sweden Population-based cohort free of CVD at baseline (n=4483, mean age 58) • 5 biomarkers assessed in backward elimination models – CRP, cystatin C, LP-PLA2, MR-proADM, MR-proANP, NT-proBNP • Results: • 2 markers retained for CVD events – NT-proBNP and CRP • 2 markers retained for CHD events – NT-proBNP and MR-proADM Melander et al. JAMA 2009. Malmö, Sweden Quartiles of Multimarker Score and Risk of CV Events HR 1.6 vs 1st Q P=0.001 for trend HR 1.4 vs 1st Q HR 1.1 vs 1st Q Multimarker score: standardized values for each marker (# of SD units from the mean) summed, then pts divided into quartiles. CRP, cystatin C, LP-PLA2, MR-proADM, MR-proANP, NT-proBNP Melander et al. JAMA 2009. Malmö, Sweden Multiple Biomarkers and Incident CV Events HR per 1-SD increase in BM C-statistic without BMs: 0.758 for CVD, 0.760 for CHD • NRI is not significant • In intermediate risk individuals: NRI 7% (CVD) and 15% (CHD), both significant Melander et al. JAMA 2009. Additional Utility of Multiple Biomarkers for Prediction of Death: FHS ROC Curves for Death Biomarker BNP Adj HR Death per 1 SD 1.40 CRP 1.39 Urine Alb/Cr 1.22 Homocysteine 1.20 Renin 1.17 SCORE 4.08* Sensitivity 0.82 0.80 * HR for highest quintile v. lowest 2 quintiles 1-Specificity Wang TJ et al. NEJM 2006;355:2631 Multiple biomarkers and reclassification Standard risk factors alone Standard risk factors plus multimarker score <10% 10-20% >20% <10% 79% 3% 0% 10-20% 3% 9% 1% >20% 0% 1% 3% Blankenberg, S. et al. Circulation 2010;121:2388-2397 Blankenberg, S. et al. Circulation 2010;121:2388-2397 Copyright ©2010 American Heart Association Fully adjusted HRs of biomarkers for incident cardiovascular events Only hs-CRP, NT-pro-BNP and Troponin I levels consistently predicted risk of CVD events Blankenberg, S. et al. Circulation 2010;121:2388-2397 Copyright ©2010 American Heart Association Results of the biomarker score including troponin I, NTbroBNP, and C-reactive protein in the Belfast PRIME Men validation cohort Blankenberg, S. et al. Circulation 2010;121:2388-2397 Changing Targets for Biomarkers and Imaging? ASA + LDL <70 High Risk ASA + Statin + Intermediate Risk CAC ≥ 100 ↑ biomarker No ASA No Statin CAC ≥ 300 Elevated Biomarker ASA + LDL <100 Low Risk Budoff et al Circ 2006;114:1761-1791 Greenland et al Circ 2007;115:402-426 Multimarker Panel and CAC ESAM ≥95%, PGLYRP-1 ≥95%, sRAGE ≤5% CRP ≥95%, OPG ≥95%,NT-proBNP ≥95%, 0 N per Group Adjusted OR 1 2 >3 Number of Markers 1951 419 71 38 REF 1.9 3.8 5.1 DeLemos, AHA Epi and Prevention Conf., 2010 Comparing Model Performance of Predicting CAC Score > 10 C index Likelihood χ2 BIC AIC FRS 0.731* 373 2209 2180 FRS + Biomarker Score 0.760* 414 2191 2145 BIC=Bayesian Information criterion (lower indicates better model selection) FRS=Framingham Risk Categories * p < 0.0001 for comparison DeLemos, AHA Epi and Prevention Conf., 2010 Total Biomarker Quartile vs. CAC and TAC Prevalence (n=1302) (Wong ND et al., AHA Epi 2010) 80 70 60 48 52 53 64 59 68 70 57 45 50 Prevalence 40 (%) 30 33 50 39 20 10 0 CAC TAC CAC +/- TAC Biomarker Quartile Q1 P-trend =0.007 for CAC and <0.0001 for TAC and =0.0001 for CAC +/- TAC Q2 Q3 Q4 Biomarkers include high sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP), interleukin-6 (IL-6), brain natriuretic peptide (BNP), myleoperoxidase (MPO), plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) and angiotensinogen