Cargando…
Prevalence of anti‐beta‐1 antibody 6 months after hospitalization for acute heart failure predicts adverse outcome
AIMS: Agonistic antibodies against neurohumoral receptors can induce cardio‐noxious effects by altering the baseline receptor activity. To estimate the prevalence of autoantibodies directed against the beta‐1 receptor (b1‐AAB) in patients admitted to the hospital for acute heart failure (HF) at (i)...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
John Wiley and Sons Inc.
2023
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10567622/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37688355 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ehf2.14509 |
_version_ | 1785119169000243200 |
---|---|
author | Morbach, Caroline Beyersdorf, Niklas Moser, Nicola Pelin, Dora Afshar, Boshra Ramos, Gustavo Kerkau, Thomas Kaiser, Elisa Lamers, Janna Pätkau, Jannika Sahiti, Floran Albert, Judith Güder, Gülmisal Ertl, Georg Angermann, Christiane E. Frantz, Stefan Hofmann, Ulrich Jahns, Roland Jahns, Valerie Störk, Stefan |
author_facet | Morbach, Caroline Beyersdorf, Niklas Moser, Nicola Pelin, Dora Afshar, Boshra Ramos, Gustavo Kerkau, Thomas Kaiser, Elisa Lamers, Janna Pätkau, Jannika Sahiti, Floran Albert, Judith Güder, Gülmisal Ertl, Georg Angermann, Christiane E. Frantz, Stefan Hofmann, Ulrich Jahns, Roland Jahns, Valerie Störk, Stefan |
author_sort | Morbach, Caroline |
collection | PubMed |
description | AIMS: Agonistic antibodies against neurohumoral receptors can induce cardio‐noxious effects by altering the baseline receptor activity. To estimate the prevalence of autoantibodies directed against the beta‐1 receptor (b1‐AAB) in patients admitted to the hospital for acute heart failure (HF) at (i) baseline and (ii) after 6 months of follow‐up (F6) and (iii) after another 12 months of follow‐up (i.e. 18 months after index hospitalization), to estimate their prognostic impact on clinical outcome (death or first hospitalization for HF). METHODS AND RESULTS: In 47 patients, b1‐AAB were serially determined in serum samples collected at index hospitalization and at 6 months of follow‐up (F6) with a flow cytometry‐based assay: median age 71 years (quartiles 60, 80), 23 (49%) women, 24 (51%) HF with preserved ejection fraction. Beta1‐AAB were detected in three subjects at index hospitalization (6%), and in eight subjects at F6 (17%). There were no differences apparent between patients with and without b1‐AAB at F6 with regard to age, sex, type, duration, or main cause of HF. During the 12 month period following F6 (i.e. up to month 18), eight events occurred. Event‐free survival was associated with prevalence of b1‐AAB at F6. Compared with patients without b1‐AAB at F6, age‐adjusted Cox regression indicated a higher event risk in patients harbouring b1‐AAB, with a hazard ratio of 8.96 (95% confidence interval 1.81–44.50, P = 0.007). CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest a possible adverse prognostic relevance of b1‐AAB in patients with acute HF, but this observation needs to be confirmed in larger patient collectives. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-10567622 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2023 |
publisher | John Wiley and Sons Inc. |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-105676222023-10-13 Prevalence of anti‐beta‐1 antibody 6 months after hospitalization for acute heart failure predicts adverse outcome Morbach, Caroline Beyersdorf, Niklas Moser, Nicola Pelin, Dora Afshar, Boshra Ramos, Gustavo Kerkau, Thomas Kaiser, Elisa Lamers, Janna Pätkau, Jannika Sahiti, Floran Albert, Judith Güder, Gülmisal Ertl, Georg Angermann, Christiane E. Frantz, Stefan Hofmann, Ulrich Jahns, Roland Jahns, Valerie Störk, Stefan ESC Heart Fail Short Communications AIMS: Agonistic antibodies against neurohumoral receptors can induce cardio‐noxious effects by altering the baseline receptor activity. To estimate the prevalence of autoantibodies directed against the beta‐1 receptor (b1‐AAB) in patients admitted to the hospital for acute heart failure (HF) at (i) baseline and (ii) after 6 months of follow‐up (F6) and (iii) after another 12 months of follow‐up (i.e. 18 months after index hospitalization), to estimate their prognostic impact on clinical outcome (death or first hospitalization for HF). METHODS AND RESULTS: In 47 patients, b1‐AAB were serially determined in serum samples collected at index hospitalization and at 6 months of follow‐up (F6) with a flow cytometry‐based assay: median age 71 years (quartiles 60, 80), 23 (49%) women, 24 (51%) HF with preserved ejection fraction. Beta1‐AAB were detected in three subjects at index hospitalization (6%), and in eight subjects at F6 (17%). There were no differences apparent between patients with and without b1‐AAB at F6 with regard to age, sex, type, duration, or main cause of HF. During the 12 month period following F6 (i.e. up to month 18), eight events occurred. Event‐free survival was associated with prevalence of b1‐AAB at F6. Compared with patients without b1‐AAB at F6, age‐adjusted Cox regression indicated a higher event risk in patients harbouring b1‐AAB, with a hazard ratio of 8.96 (95% confidence interval 1.81–44.50, P = 0.007). CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest a possible adverse prognostic relevance of b1‐AAB in patients with acute HF, but this observation needs to be confirmed in larger patient collectives. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023-09-08 /pmc/articles/PMC10567622/ /pubmed/37688355 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ehf2.14509 Text en © 2023 The Authors. ESC Heart Failure published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Cardiology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made. |
spellingShingle | Short Communications Morbach, Caroline Beyersdorf, Niklas Moser, Nicola Pelin, Dora Afshar, Boshra Ramos, Gustavo Kerkau, Thomas Kaiser, Elisa Lamers, Janna Pätkau, Jannika Sahiti, Floran Albert, Judith Güder, Gülmisal Ertl, Georg Angermann, Christiane E. Frantz, Stefan Hofmann, Ulrich Jahns, Roland Jahns, Valerie Störk, Stefan Prevalence of anti‐beta‐1 antibody 6 months after hospitalization for acute heart failure predicts adverse outcome |
title | Prevalence of anti‐beta‐1 antibody 6 months after hospitalization for acute heart failure predicts adverse outcome |
title_full | Prevalence of anti‐beta‐1 antibody 6 months after hospitalization for acute heart failure predicts adverse outcome |
title_fullStr | Prevalence of anti‐beta‐1 antibody 6 months after hospitalization for acute heart failure predicts adverse outcome |
title_full_unstemmed | Prevalence of anti‐beta‐1 antibody 6 months after hospitalization for acute heart failure predicts adverse outcome |
title_short | Prevalence of anti‐beta‐1 antibody 6 months after hospitalization for acute heart failure predicts adverse outcome |
title_sort | prevalence of anti‐beta‐1 antibody 6 months after hospitalization for acute heart failure predicts adverse outcome |
topic | Short Communications |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10567622/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37688355 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ehf2.14509 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT morbachcaroline prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT beyersdorfniklas prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT mosernicola prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT pelindora prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT afsharboshra prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT ramosgustavo prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT kerkauthomas prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT kaiserelisa prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT lamersjanna prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT patkaujannika prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT sahitifloran prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT albertjudith prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT gudergulmisal prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT ertlgeorg prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT angermannchristianee prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT frantzstefan prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT hofmannulrich prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT jahnsroland prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT jahnsvalerie prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome AT storkstefan prevalenceofantibeta1antibody6monthsafterhospitalizationforacuteheartfailurepredictsadverseoutcome |