Association Between Homocysteine and Vascular Calcification Incidence, Prevalence, and Progression in the MESA Cohort

Author:

Karger Amy B.1,Steffen Brian T.1,Nomura Sarah O.1,Guan Weihua2,Garg Parveen K.3,Szklo Moyses4,Budoff Matthew J.5,Tsai Michael Y.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Laboratory Medicine & Pathology University of Minnesota Minneapolis MN

2. Division of Biostatistics School of Public Health University of Minnesota Minneapolis MN

3. Division of Cardiology University of Southern California Los Angeles CA

4. Department of Epidemiology Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Baltimore MD

5. Los Angeles Biomedical Research Center at Harbor‐UCLA Torrance CA

Abstract

Background While elevated homocysteine has been associated with calcification in several studies, its importance as a cardiovascular risk factor remains unclear. This study examines the relationship between homocysteine and vascular and valve calcification in the MESA (Multi‐ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis) cohort. Methods and Results MESA participants with baseline homocysteine measurements and cardiac computed tomography scans were included (N=6789). Baseline and follow‐up assessment of vascular (coronary artery [CAC], descending thoracic aorta [DTAC]) and valve (aortic valve [AVC], mitral annular [MAC]) calcification was performed. Prevalence ratio/relative risk regression was used to assess the relationship of homocysteine with prevalent and incident calcification, and multivariable logistic regression was used to assess associations between homocysteine and calcification progression. Elevated homocysteine was associated with greater relative risk of prevalent and incident CAC and incident DTAC . We also identified a strong association between elevated homocysteine and CAC and DTAC progression. Elevated homocysteine was found to confer a >2‐fold increased risk of severe CAC progression (defined as Δ CAC ≥100/year) and an ≈1.5‐fold increased risk for severe DTAC progression (defined as Δ DTAC ≥100/year). Conclusions To our knowledge, this is the first study demonstrating an association between elevated homocysteine and both incidence and progression of coronary and extra‐coronary vascular calcification. Our findings suggest a potential role for elevated homocysteine as a risk factor for severe vascular calcification progression. Future studies are warranted to further assess the utility of homocysteine as a biomarker for vascular calcification incidence and progression. Clinical Trial Registration https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ . Unique identifier: NCT 00005487.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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