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Serum GDF15, a Promising Biomarker in Obese Patients Undergoing Heart Surgery

Background: Obesity is a risk factor that negatively impacts outcomes in patients undergoing heart surgery by mechanisms that are not well-defined nor predicated on BMI alone. This knowledge gap has fuelled a search for biomarkers associated with cardiovascular diseases that could provide clinical i...

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Autores principales: Sarkar, Shreya, Legere, Stephanie, Haidl, Ian, Marshall, Jean, MacLeod, Jeffrey B., Aguiar, Christie, Lutchmedial, Sohrab, Hassan, Ansar, Brunt, Keith R., Kienesberger, Petra, Pulinilkunnil, Thomas, Légaré, Jean-François
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7327098/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32671100
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2020.00103
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author Sarkar, Shreya
Legere, Stephanie
Haidl, Ian
Marshall, Jean
MacLeod, Jeffrey B.
Aguiar, Christie
Lutchmedial, Sohrab
Hassan, Ansar
Brunt, Keith R.
Kienesberger, Petra
Pulinilkunnil, Thomas
Légaré, Jean-François
author_facet Sarkar, Shreya
Legere, Stephanie
Haidl, Ian
Marshall, Jean
MacLeod, Jeffrey B.
Aguiar, Christie
Lutchmedial, Sohrab
Hassan, Ansar
Brunt, Keith R.
Kienesberger, Petra
Pulinilkunnil, Thomas
Légaré, Jean-François
author_sort Sarkar, Shreya
collection PubMed
description Background: Obesity is a risk factor that negatively impacts outcomes in patients undergoing heart surgery by mechanisms that are not well-defined nor predicated on BMI alone. This knowledge gap has fuelled a search for biomarkers associated with cardiovascular diseases that could provide clinical insight to surgeons. One such biomarker is growth differentiation factor15(GDF15), associated with inflammation, metabolism, and heart failure outcomes but not yet examined in the context of obesity and cardiac surgery outcomes. Methods: Patients undergoing open-heart surgery were consented and enrolled for blood and tissue (atria) sampling at the time of surgery. Biomarker analysis was carried out using ELISA and western blot/qPCR, respectively. Biomarker screening was classified by inflammation(NLR, GDF15, Galectin3, ST2, TNFR2), heart failure(HF)/remodeling(NT-proBNP) and metabolism(glycemia, lipid profile). Patients were categorized based on BMI: obese group (BMI ≥30.0) and non-obese group(BMI 20.0–29.9). Subsequent stratification of GDF15 high patients was conservatively set as being in the 75th percentile. Results: A total of 80 patients undergoing any open-heart surgical interventions were included in the study. Obese (mean BMI = 35.8, n = 38) and non-obese (mean BMI = 25.7, n = 42) groups had no significant differences in age, sex, or co-morbidities. Compared to other biomarkers, plasma GDF15 (mean 1,736 vs. 1,207 ng/l, p < 0.001) was significantly higher in obese patients compared to non-obese. Plasma GDF15 also displayed a significant linear correlation with BMI (R(2) = 0.097; p = 0.0049). Atria tissue was shown to be a significant source of GDF15 protein and tissue levels significantly correlated with plasma GDF15 (R(2) = 0.4, p = 0.0004). Obesity was not associated with early/late mortality at median follow-up >2years. However, patients with high GDF15 (>1,580 ng/l) had reduced survival (65%) compared to the remaining patients with lower GDF15 levels (95%) by Kaplan Meier Analysis (median >2 years; p = 0.007). Conclusions: Circulating GDF15 is a salient biomarker likely sourced from heart tissue that appears to predict higher risk obese patients for adverse outcomes. More importantly, elevated GDF15 accounted for more sensitive outcome association than BMI at 2 years post-cardiac surgery, suggesting it heralds links to pathogenicity and should be actively studied prospectively and dynamically in a post-operative follow-up. Trial number: NCT03248921.
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spelling pubmed-73270982020-07-14 Serum GDF15, a Promising Biomarker in Obese Patients Undergoing Heart Surgery Sarkar, Shreya Legere, Stephanie Haidl, Ian Marshall, Jean MacLeod, Jeffrey B. Aguiar, Christie Lutchmedial, Sohrab Hassan, Ansar Brunt, Keith R. Kienesberger, Petra Pulinilkunnil, Thomas Légaré, Jean-François Front Cardiovasc Med Cardiovascular Medicine Background: Obesity is a risk factor that negatively impacts outcomes in patients undergoing heart surgery by mechanisms that are not well-defined nor predicated on BMI alone. This knowledge gap has fuelled a search for biomarkers associated with cardiovascular diseases that could provide clinical insight to surgeons. One such biomarker is growth differentiation factor15(GDF15), associated with inflammation, metabolism, and heart failure outcomes but not yet examined in the context of obesity and cardiac surgery outcomes. Methods: Patients undergoing open-heart surgery were consented and enrolled for blood and tissue (atria) sampling at the time of surgery. Biomarker analysis was carried out using ELISA and western blot/qPCR, respectively. Biomarker screening was classified by inflammation(NLR, GDF15, Galectin3, ST2, TNFR2), heart failure(HF)/remodeling(NT-proBNP) and metabolism(glycemia, lipid profile). Patients were categorized based on BMI: obese group (BMI ≥30.0) and non-obese group(BMI 20.0–29.9). Subsequent stratification of GDF15 high patients was conservatively set as being in the 75th percentile. Results: A total of 80 patients undergoing any open-heart surgical interventions were included in the study. Obese (mean BMI = 35.8, n = 38) and non-obese (mean BMI = 25.7, n = 42) groups had no significant differences in age, sex, or co-morbidities. Compared to other biomarkers, plasma GDF15 (mean 1,736 vs. 1,207 ng/l, p < 0.001) was significantly higher in obese patients compared to non-obese. Plasma GDF15 also displayed a significant linear correlation with BMI (R(2) = 0.097; p = 0.0049). Atria tissue was shown to be a significant source of GDF15 protein and tissue levels significantly correlated with plasma GDF15 (R(2) = 0.4, p = 0.0004). Obesity was not associated with early/late mortality at median follow-up >2years. However, patients with high GDF15 (>1,580 ng/l) had reduced survival (65%) compared to the remaining patients with lower GDF15 levels (95%) by Kaplan Meier Analysis (median >2 years; p = 0.007). Conclusions: Circulating GDF15 is a salient biomarker likely sourced from heart tissue that appears to predict higher risk obese patients for adverse outcomes. More importantly, elevated GDF15 accounted for more sensitive outcome association than BMI at 2 years post-cardiac surgery, suggesting it heralds links to pathogenicity and should be actively studied prospectively and dynamically in a post-operative follow-up. Trial number: NCT03248921. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-06-24 /pmc/articles/PMC7327098/ /pubmed/32671100 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2020.00103 Text en Copyright © 2020 Sarkar, Legere, Haidl, Marshall, MacLeod, Aguiar, Lutchmedial, Hassan, Brunt, Kienesberger, Pulinilkunnil and Légaré. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Cardiovascular Medicine
Sarkar, Shreya
Legere, Stephanie
Haidl, Ian
Marshall, Jean
MacLeod, Jeffrey B.
Aguiar, Christie
Lutchmedial, Sohrab
Hassan, Ansar
Brunt, Keith R.
Kienesberger, Petra
Pulinilkunnil, Thomas
Légaré, Jean-François
Serum GDF15, a Promising Biomarker in Obese Patients Undergoing Heart Surgery
title Serum GDF15, a Promising Biomarker in Obese Patients Undergoing Heart Surgery
title_full Serum GDF15, a Promising Biomarker in Obese Patients Undergoing Heart Surgery
title_fullStr Serum GDF15, a Promising Biomarker in Obese Patients Undergoing Heart Surgery
title_full_unstemmed Serum GDF15, a Promising Biomarker in Obese Patients Undergoing Heart Surgery
title_short Serum GDF15, a Promising Biomarker in Obese Patients Undergoing Heart Surgery
title_sort serum gdf15, a promising biomarker in obese patients undergoing heart surgery
topic Cardiovascular Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7327098/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32671100
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2020.00103
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