Abnormal circulating steroids refine risk of progression to heart failure in ischemic heart disease

Author:

Fan Yangkai12,Li Fengjuan12,Tan Xin12,Ren Lu12,Peng Xueyan12,Yu Jiaqi12,Chen Weiyao12,Jia Lixin123,Zhu Fuli4,Yin Wenjie5,Du Jie12,Wang Yuan12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Beijing Collaborative Innovation Centre for Cardiovascular Disorders, The Key Laboratory of Remodeling‐Related Cardiovascular Disease, Ministry of Education, Beijing Anzhen Hospital Capital Medical University Beijing China

2. Beijing Institute of Heart, Lung, and Blood Vessel Diseases Beijing China

3. Department of Cardiology, Beijing Anzhen Hospital Capital Medical University Beijing China

4. Department of Cardiology, Beijing Luhe Hospital Capital Medical University Beijing China

5. Department of Hypertension The First Hospital of Shanxi Medical University Shanxi China

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPatients with ischemic heart disease (IHD) experience a high incidence of progression to heart failure (HF) despite current therapies. We speculated that steroid hormone metabolic disorders distinct adverse phenotypes and contribute to HF.MethodsWe measured 18 steroids using liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry in 2023 patients from the Registry Study of Biomarkers in Ischemic Heart Disease (BIOMS‐IHD), including 1091 patients with IHD in a retrospective discovery set and 932 patients with IHD in a multicentre validation set. Our outcomes included incident HF after a median follow‐up of 4 years.ResultsWe demonstrated steroid‐based signatures of inflammation, coronary microvascular dysfunction and left ventricular hypertrophy that were associated with subsequent HF events in patients with IHD. In both cohorts, patients with a high steroid–heart failure score (SHFS) (>1) exhibited a greater risk of incident HF than patients with a low SHFS (≤1). The SHFS further improved the prognostic accuracy beyond clinical variables (net reclassification improvement of 0.628 in the discovery set and 0.299 in the validation set) and demonstrated the maximal effect of steroid signatures in patients with IHD who had lower B‐type natriuretic peptide levels (pinteraction = 0.038).ConclusionsA steroid‐based strategy can simply and effectively identify individuals at higher HF risk who may derive benefit from more intensive follow‐ups.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry,Biochemistry,General Medicine

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