Circulating Proangiogenic Cell Activity Is Associated with Cardiovascular Disease Risk

Author:

Mavromatis Kreton12,Aznaouridis Konstantinos1,Al Mheid Ibhar1,Veledar Emir1,Dhawan Saurabh1,Murrow Jonathan R.1,Forghani Zohreh2,Sutcliffe Diane J.1,Ghasemzadeh Nima1,Alexander R. Wayne1,Taylor W. Robert123,Quyyumi Arshed A.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA

2. Department of Medicine, Atlanta VA Medical Center, Decatur, GA, USA

3. Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering, Georgia Tech and Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA

Abstract

Vascular injury mobilizes bone marrow–derived proangiogenic cells into the circulation, where these cells can facilitate vascular repair and new vessel formation. We sought to determine the relationship between a new biomarker of circulating bone marrow–derived proangiogenic cell activity, the presence of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (CVD) and its risk factors, and clinical outcomes. Circulating proangiogenic cell activity was estimated using a reproducible angiogenic colony-forming unit (CFU-A) assay in 532 clinically stable subjects aged 20 to 90 years and ranging in the CVD risk spectrum from those who are healthy without risk factors to those with active CVD. CFU-A counts increased with the burden of CVD risk factors ( p < 0.001). CFU-A counts were higher in subjects with symptomatic CVD than in those without ( p < 0.001). During follow-up of 232 subjects with CVD, CFU-A counts were higher in those with death, myocardial infarction, or stroke than in those without (110 [70–173] vs 84 [51–136], p = 0.01). Therefore, we conclude that circulating proangiogenic cell activity, as estimated by CFU-A counts, increases with CVD risk factor burden and in the presence of established CVD. Furthermore, higher circulating proangiogenic cell activity is associated with worse clinical outcome in those with CVD.

Publisher

Elsevier BV

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