Serum metabolomics improves risk stratification for incident heart failure
- PMID: 38623713
- DOI: 10.1002/ejhf.3226
Serum metabolomics improves risk stratification for incident heart failure
Abstract
Aims: Prediction and early detection of heart failure (HF) is crucial to mitigate its impact on quality of life, survival, and healthcare expenditure. Here, we explored the predictive value of serum metabolomics (168 metabolites detected by proton nuclear magnetic resonance [1H-NMR] spectroscopy) for incident HF.
Methods and results: Leveraging data of 68 311 individuals and >0.8 million person-years of follow-up from the UK Biobank cohort, we (i) fitted per-metabolite Cox proportional hazards models to assess individual metabolite associations, and (ii) trained and validated elastic net models to predict incident HF using the serum metabolome. We benchmarked discriminative performance against a comprehensive, well-validated clinical risk score (Pooled Cohort Equations to Prevent HF [PCP-HF]). During a median follow-up of ≈12.3 years, several metabolites showed independent association with incident HF (90/168 adjusting for age and sex, 48/168 adjusting for PCP-HF). Performance-optimized risk models effectively retained key predictors representing highly correlated clusters (≈80% feature reduction). Adding metabolomics to PCP-HF improved predictive performance (Harrel's C: 0.768 vs. 0.755, ΔC = 0.013, [95% confidence interval [CI] 0.004-0.022], continuous net reclassification improvement [NRI]: 0.287 [95% CI 0.200-0.367], relative integrated discrimination improvement [IDI]: 17.47% [95% CI 9.463-27.825]). Models including age, sex and metabolomics performed almost as well as PCP-HF (Harrel's C: 0.745 vs. 0.755, ΔC = 0.010 [95% CI -0.004 to 0.027], continuous NRI: 0.097 [95% CI -0.025 to 0.217], relative IDI: 13.445% [95% CI -10.608 to 41.454]). Risk and survival stratification was improved by integrating metabolomics.
Conclusion: Serum metabolomics improves incident HF risk prediction over PCP-HF. Scores based on age, sex and metabolomics exhibit similar predictive power to clinically-based models, potentially offering a cost-effective, standardizable, and scalable single-domain alternative.
Keywords: Biomarker; Heart failure; Prevention; Risk prediction; Screening; Serum metabolomics.
© 2024 European Society of Cardiology.
References
-
- Groenewegen A, Rutten FH, Mosterd A, Hoes AW. Epidemiology of heart failure. Eur J Heart Fail 2020;22:1342–1356. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejhf.1858
-
- Heidenreich PA, Albert NM, Allen LA, Bluemke DA, Butler J, Fonarow GC, et al.; American Heart Association Advocacy Coordinating Committee; Council on Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology; Council on Cardiovascular Radiology and Intervention; Council on Clinical Cardiology; Council on Epidemiology and Prevention; Stroke Council. Forecasting the impact of heart failure in the United States: A policy statement from the American Heart Association. Circ Heart Fail 2013;6:606–619. https://doi.org/10.1161/HHF.0b013e318291329a
-
- Ponikowski P, Anker SD, AlHabib KF, Cowie MR, Force TL, Hu S, et al. Heart failure: Preventing disease and death worldwide. ESC Heart Fail 2014;1:4–25. https://doi.org/10.1002/ehf2.12005
-
- Smith L, Atherly A, Campbell J, Flattery N, Coronel S, Krantz M. Cost‐effectiveness of a statewide public health intervention to reduce cardiovascular disease risk. BMC Public Health 2019;19:1234. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889‐019‐7573‐8
-
- McDonagh TA, Metra M, Adamo M, Gardner RS, Baumbach A, Böhm M, et al.; ESC Scientific Document Group. 2021 ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic heart failure: Developed by the Task Force for the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic heart failure of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC). With the special contribution of the Heart Failure Association (HFA) of the ESC. Eur J Heart Fail 2022;24:4–131. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejhf.2333
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Research Materials
Miscellaneous