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Neuregulin-1β Is Associated With Disease Severity and Adverse Outcomes in Chronic Heart Failure
Author(s) -
Bonnie Ky,
Stephen E. Kimmel,
Radwan Safa,
Mary Putt,
Nancy K. Sweitzer,
James C. Fang,
Douglas B. Sawyer,
Thomas P. Cappola
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
circulation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.795
H-Index - 607
eISSN - 1524-4539
pISSN - 0009-7322
DOI - 10.1161/circulationaha.109.856310
Subject(s) - medicine , heart failure , cardiology , hazard ratio , brain natriuretic peptide , atrial fibrillation , natriuretic peptide , heart transplantation , biomarker , heart disease , confidence interval , biochemistry , chemistry
Background— Neuregulin-1 (NRG-1) is a paracrine factor released by microvascular endothelial cells that has cardioprotective effects in animal models of heart failure. However, circulating NRG-1 has not been studied in human heart disease. We used a novel immunoassay to test whether circulating NRG-1β is associated with disease severity and clinical outcomes in chronic heart failure.Methods and Results— Serum NRG-1β was quantified in 899 outpatients in the Penn Heart Failure Study, a referral cohort representing a broad spectrum of systolic heart failure. Circulating NRG-1β was significantly elevated in patients with worse disease severity (median, 6.2 ng/mL for New York Heart Association class IV versus 4.4 ng/mL for class I;P =0.002). In adjusted models, NRG-1β was independently associated with an increased risk of death or cardiac transplantation over a median follow-up of 2.4 years (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.58; 95% confidence interval, 1.04 to 2.39;P =0.03 comparing fourth versus first NRG-1β quartile). Associations with outcome differed by heart failure cause and symptom severity, with the strongest associations observed in patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy (interactionP =0.008) and New York Heart Association class III/IV symptoms (interactionP =0.01). These findings were all independent of brain natriuretic peptide, and assessment of NRG-1β and brain natriuretic peptide jointly provided better risk stratification than each biomarker individually in patients with ischemic or New York Heart Association class III/IV heart failure.Conclusions— Circulating NRG-1β is independently associated with heart failure severity and risk of death or cardiac transplantation. These findings support a role for NRG-1/ErbB signaling in human heart failure and identify serum NRG-1β as a novel biomarker that may have clinical applications.

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