C‐reactive protein, diastolic dysfunction, and risk of heart failure in patients with coronary disease: Heart and Soul Study
Open Access
- 13 January 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Heart Failure
- Vol. 10 (1) , 63-69
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejheart.2007.11.003
Abstract
Background: High‐sensitivity C‐reactive protein (CRP) is an inflammatory marker that predicts coronary heart disease (CHD) and, in recent studies, incident heart failure (HF). Whether the association of inflammation with incident HF is explained by worse baseline left ventricular dysfunction or by underlying CHD is unknown. Methods and results: Serum CRP was measured in a cohort of 985 outpatients with established CHD from the Heart and Soul Study. During 3 years of follow‐up, 15% of the participants with elevated CRP levels (>3mg/L) were hospitalised for HF, compared with 7% of those with CRP ≤3 mg/L. In multivariate analysis, elevated CRP was associated with HF after adjustment for traditional risk factors, baseline CHD severity and interim MI (adjusted HR 2.1, 95% CI, 1.2–3.6; p=0.009). However, elevated CRP was no longer associated with HF after further adjustment for the presence of diastolic dysfunction on echocardiography (adjusted HR 1.6, 95% CI, 0.8–3.2; p=0.1). Conclusions: Among outpatients with stable CHD, elevated CRP levels predict hospitalisation for heart failure, independent of baseline heart failure, medication use, CHD severity, and subsequent MI events. This relationship appears to be at least partly explained by abnormal diastolic function in patients with elevated CRP levels.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Depression and Inflammation in Patients With Coronary Heart Disease: Findings from the Heart and Soul StudyBiological Psychiatry, 2007
- C-reactive protein and risk of heart failure. The Rotterdam StudyAmerican Heart Journal, 2006
- Inflammation and long-term mortality in acute congestive heart failureAmerican Heart Journal, 2006
- High-Sensitivity C-Reactive Protein and Parameters of Left Ventricular DysfunctionJournal of Cardiac Failure, 2006
- Sex differences in left ventricular function in older persons with mild hypertensionAmerican Heart Journal, 2005
- High-sensitivity C-reactive protein: potential adjunct for risk stratification in patients with stable congestive heart failureEuropean Heart Journal, 2005
- Relation between depressive symptoms and treadmill exercise capacity in the Heart and Soul StudyThe American Journal of Cardiology, 2004
- Independent prognostic value of elevated high-sensitivity C-reactive protein in chronic heart failureAmerican Heart Journal, 2004
- C-reactive protein in acute myocardial infarction: association with heart failureAmerican Heart Journal, 2003
- A study of C-reactive protein in the serum of patients with congestive heart failureAmerican Heart Journal, 1956