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RESEARCH PRODUCT
High-sensitivity troponin assay improves prediction of cardiovascular risk in patients with cerebral ischaemia
Rolf WachterFrank T. EdelmannJoachim SeegersCord-friedrich NiehausJanin WohlfahrtGerd HasenfußKlaus GröschelKlaus GröschelMeinhard MendeRaoul StahrenbergKatrin Wassersubject
MaleKaplan-Meier Estimate030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyBrain IschemiaCohort Studies0302 clinical medicineNatriuretic Peptide BrainMedicine1506Prospective StudiesProspective cohort studyStrokeTroponin TAtrial fibrillationMiddle AgedPrognosisTroponin3. Good healthStrokePsychiatry and Mental healthCardiovascular DiseasesIschemic Attack TransientPredictive value of testsCardiologyFemaleFatty Acid Binding Protein 3Atrial Natriuretic Factormedicine.medical_specialtyAcute coronary syndromeGrowth Differentiation Factor 15Endpoint DeterminationCardiologyFatty Acid-Binding ProteinsRisk Assessment03 medical and health sciencesTroponin TPredictive Value of TestsInternal medicineHumansSurvival analysisAgedbusiness.industryProportional hazards modelmedicine.diseaseSurvival AnalysisPeptide FragmentsSurgeryCerebrovascular DiseaseSurgeryNeurology (clinical)businessBiomarkers030217 neurology & neurosurgeryFollow-Up Studiesdescription
Background and purpose Clinical scores are recommended for predicting cardiovascular risk in patients with cerebral ischaemia to inform secondary prevention. Blood biomarkers may improve prediction beyond clinical scores. Methods Within the observational Find-AF trial (ISRCTN46104198), 197 patients >18 years of age with cerebral ischaemia and without atrial fibrillation had blood sampled at baseline. The predictive value of five biomarkers for a combined vascular endpoint (acute coronary syndrome, stroke, cardiovascular death) and all-cause mortality was determined, alone and in addition to the Essen Stroke Risk Score (ESRS), Stroke Prognostic Instrument 2 (SPI-2) and National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIH-SS). Results There were 23 vascular events (11.7%) and 13 deaths (6.6%) to 1 year follow-up. In multivariate analyses of all markers, only high-sensitivity troponin T (hsTropT) remained independently predictive for vascular events (p=0.045) and all-cause mortality (p=0.004). hsTropT was higher in patients with a vascular event (median 12.7 ng/ml vs 5.1 ng/ml), and patients with hsTropT above the median of 6.15 ng/ml had vascular events more frequently (HR 3.86, p=0.008). For prediction of vascular events as well as all-cause mortality, hsTropT significantly improved multivariate Cox regression models with ESRS, SPI-2 or NIH-SS. The c-statistic increased non-significantly from 0.695 (ESRS) or 0.710 (hsTropT) to 0.747 (ESRS+hsTropT) and from 0.699 (SPI-2) to 0.763 (SPI-2+hsTropT). No patient with a low-risk ESRS and an hsTropT below the median had a vascular event or died. Conclusions hsTropT predicts vascular events and all-cause mortality in patients with acute cerebral ischaemia and improves prediction beyond established clinical scores.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2013-01-25 | Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry |