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Longitudinal Changes in Cardiac Troponin and Risk of Heart Failure Among Black Adults

Authors :
Amit Saha
Kershaw V. Patel
Colby Ayers
Christie M. Ballantyne
Adolfo Correa
Christopher Defilippi
Michael E. Hall
Robert J. Mentz
Stephen L. Seliger
Wondwosen Yimer
Javed Butler
Jarett D. Berry
James A. De Lemos
Ambarish Pandey
Source :
Journal of Cardiac Failure. 29:6-15
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2023.

Abstract

Among Black adults, high-sensitivity cardiac troponin I (hs-cTnI) is associated with heart failure (HF) risk. The association of longitudinal changes in hs-cTnI with risk of incident HF, HF with reduced and preserved ejection fraction (HFrEF and HFpEF, respectively), among Black adults is not well-established.This study included Black participants from the Jackson Heart Study with available hs-cTnI data at visits 1 (2000-2004) and 2 (2005-2008) and no history of cardiovascular disease. Cox models were used to evaluate associations of categories of longitudinal change in hs-cTnI with incident HF risk. Among 2423 participants, 11.6% had incident elevation in hs-cTnI at visit 2, and 16.9% had stable or improved elevation (≤50% increase in hs-cTnI), and 4.0% had worsened hs-cTnI elevation (50% increase). Over a median follow-up of 12.0 years, there were 139 incident HF hospitalizations (64 HFrEF, 58 HFpEF). Compared with participants without an elevated hs-cTnI, those with incident, stable or improved, or worsened hs-cTnI elevation had higher HF risk (adjusted hazard ratio 3.20 [95% confidence interval, 1.92-5.33]; adjusted hazard ratio 2.40, [95% confidence interval, 1.47-3.92]; and adjusted hazard ratio 8.10, [95% confidence interval, 4.74-13.83], respectively). Similar patterns of association were observed for risk of HFrEF and HFpEF.Among Black adults, an increase in hs-cTnI levels on follow-up was associated with a higher HF risk.The present study included 2423 Black adults from the Jackson Heart Study with available biomarkers of cardiac injury and no history of cardiovascular disease at visits 1 and 2. The majority of participants did not have evidence of cardiac injury at both visits (67.5%), 11.6% had evidence of cardiac injury only on follow-up, 14.5% had stable elevations, 4.0% had worsened elevations, and 2.4% had improved elevations of cardiac injury biomarkers during follow-up. Compared with participants without evidence of cardiac injury, those with new, stable, and worsened levels of cardiac injury had a higher risk of developing heart failure.Among Black adults, persistent or worsening subclinical myocardial injury is associated with an elevated risk of HF.

Details

ISSN :
10719164
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Cardiac Failure
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c188eb9f5c76e917c85ad0b6c3dc57d7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cardfail.2022.05.013