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. 2012;7(3):e33084.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0033084. Epub 2012 Mar 16.

Incremental effects of endocrine and metabolic biomarkers and abdominal obesity on cardiovascular mortality prediction

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Incremental effects of endocrine and metabolic biomarkers and abdominal obesity on cardiovascular mortality prediction

Harald Jörn Schneider et al. PLoS One. 2012.

Abstract

Background: Biomarkers may help clinicians predict cardiovascular risk. We aimed to determine if the addition of endocrine, metabolic, and obesity-associated biomarkers to conventional risk factors improves the prediction of cardiovascular and all-cause mortality.

Methodology/principal findings: In a population-based cohort study (the Study of Health in Pomerania) of 3,967 subjects (age 20-80 years) free of cardiovascular disease with a median follow-up of 10.0 years (38,638 person-years), we assessed the predictive value of conventional cardiovascular risk factors and the biomarkers thyrotropin; testosterone (in men only); insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1); hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c); creatinine; high-sensitive C-reactive protein (hsCRP); fibrinogen; urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio; and waist-to-height ratio (WHtR) on cardiovascular and all-cause death. During follow-up, we observed 339 all-cause including 103 cardiovascular deaths. In Cox regression models with conventional risk factors, the following biomarkers were retained as significant predictors of cardiovascular death after backward elimination: HbA1c, IGF-1, and hsCRP. IGF-1 and hsCRP were retained as significant predictors of all-cause death. For cardiovascular death, adding these biomarkers to the conventional risk factors changed the C-statistic from 0.898 to 0.910 (p = 0.02). The net reclassification improvement was 10.6%. For all-cause death, the C-statistic changed from 0.849 to 0.853 (P = 0.09).

Conclusions/significance: HbA1c, IGF-1, and hsCRP predict cardiovascular death independently of conventional cardiovascular risk factors. These easily assessed endocrine and metabolic biomarkers might improve the ability to predict cardiovascular death.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: Harald J. Schneider received research grants from Pfizer, travel grants from Novartis, Pfizer, and Lilly, speaker fees from Novo Nordisk and Pfizer, and is a member of the German KIMS (Pfizer International Metabolic Survey) board, a scientific advisory board evaluating the effects of growth-hormone replacement in hypopituitarism sponsored by Pfizer. Henri Wallaschofski received research grants from Pfizer and Novo Nordisc and is member of the German KIMS (Pfizer International Metabolic Survey) board, a scientific advisory board evaluating the effects of growth-hormone replacement in hypopituitarism sponsored by Pfizer. Henry Völzke, Marcus Dörr, Marcelo Markus, Stephan B. Felix, Mathias Nauck, and Nele Friedrich report no conflict of interest. This does not alter the authors' adherence to all the PLoS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.

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