Pathophysiological pathways in patients with heart failure and atrial fibrillation

Cardiovascular Research

23 October 2021
Organised by: Logo
ESC Journals

Abstract

AbstractAims

Atrial fibrillation (AF) and heart failure (HF) are two growing epidemics that frequently co-exist. We aimed to gain insights into the underlying pathophysiological pathways in HF patients with AF by comparing circulating biomarkers using pathway overrepresentation analyses.

Methods and results

From a panel of 92 biomarkers from different pathophysiological domains available in 1620 patients with HF, we first tested which biomarkers were dysregulated in patients with HF and AF (n = 648) compared with patients in sinus rhythm (n = 972). Secondly, pathway overrepresentation analyses were performed to identify biological pathways linked to higher plasma concentrations of biomarkers in patients who had HF and AF. Findings were validated in an independent HF cohort (n = 1219, 38% with AF). Patient with AF and HF were older, less often women, and less often had a history of coronary artery disease compared with those in sinus rhythm. In the index cohort, 24 biomarkers were up-regulated in patients with AF and HF. In the validation cohort, eight biomarkers were up-regulated, which all overlapped with the 24 biomarkers found in the index cohort. The strongest up-regulated biomarkers in patients with AF were spondin-1 (fold change 1.18, P = 1.33 × 10−12), insulin-like growth factor-binding protein-1 (fold change 1.32, P = 1.08 × 10−8), and insulin-like growth factor-binding protein-7 (fold change 1.33, P = 1.35 × 10−18). Pathway overrepresentation analyses revealed that the presence of AF was associated with activation amyloid-beta metabolic processes, amyloid-beta formation, and amyloid precursor protein catabolic processes with a remarkable consistency observed in the validation cohort.

Conclusion

In two independent cohorts of patients with HF, the presence of AF was associated with activation of three pathways related to amyloid-beta. These hypothesis-generating results warrant confirmation in future studies.

Contributors

Maarten P van den Berg
Maarten P van den Berg

Author

University Medical Centre Groningen Groningen , Netherlands (The)

Faiez Zannad
Faiez Zannad

Author

University of Lorraine Vandoeuvre-Les-Nancy , France

Marco Metra
Marco Metra

Author

IRCCS San Raffaele Scientific Institute Milan , Italy

John G Cleland
John G Cleland

Author

University of Glasgow Glasgow , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

Michiel Rienstra
Michiel Rienstra

Author

University Medical Centre Groningen Groningen , Netherlands (The)

Adriaan A Voors
Adriaan A Voors

Author

University Medical Centre Groningen Groningen , Netherlands (The)

ESC 365 is supported by