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The role of vascular biomarkers for primary and secondary prevention. A position paper from the European Society of Cardiology Working Group on peripheral circulation

Authors :
Marianne Brodmann
Athanasios Protogerou
Giuseppe Schillaci
Jeong Bae Park
John Lekakis
Raymond R. Townsend
Stéphane Laurent
Ulf Landmesser
Michael F. O'Rourke
Arno Schmidt-Trucksäss
Dimitri P. Mikhailidis
Thomas Weber
Renata Cifkova
Victor Aboyans
Pierre Boutouyrie
John R. Cockcroft
Francesco Cosentino
Katerina K. Naka
Damiano Rizzoni
Panagiotis Xaplanteris
Akira Yamashina
Luc M. Van Bortel
Reuven Zimlichman
Charalambos Vlachopoulos
Henrik Sillesen
Marco De Carlo
Augusto Gallino
Source :
Atherosclerosis. 241(2):507-532
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2015.

Abstract

While risk scores are invaluable tools for adapted preventive strategies, a significant gap exists between predicted and actual event rates. Additional tools to further stratify the risk of patients at an individual level are biomarkers. A surrogate endpoint is a biomarker that is intended as a substitute for a clinical endpoint. In order to be considered as a surrogate endpoint of cardiovascular events, a biomarker should satisfy several criteria, such as proof of concept, prospective validation, incremental value, clinical utility, clinical outcomes, cost-effectiveness, ease of use, methodological consensus, and reference values. We scrutinized the role of peripheral (i.e. not related to coronary circulation) noninvasive vascular biomarkers for primary and secondary cardiovascular disease prevention. Most of the biomarkers examined fit within the concept of early vascular aging. Biomarkers that fulfill most of the criteria and, therefore, are close to being considered a clinical surrogate endpoint are carotid ultrasonography, ankle-brachial index and carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity; biomarkers that fulfill some, but not all of the criteria are brachial ankle pulse wave velocity, central haemodynamics/wave reflections and C-reactive protein; biomarkers that do no not at present fulfill essential criteria are flow-mediated dilation, endothelial peripheral arterial tonometry, oxidized LDL and dysfunctional HDL. Nevertheless, it is still unclear whether a specific vascular biomarker is overly superior. A prospective study in which all vascular biomarkers are measured is still lacking. In selected cases, the combined assessment of more than one biomarker may be required.

Details

ISSN :
00219150
Volume :
241
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Atherosclerosis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....08cdb1802dbed59fcc5dd77cd44bd4a3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2015.05.007