American Heart Journal Plus (Oct 2022)

Association between high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T levels and incident stroke in the elderly Japanese population: Results from the Tohoku Medical Megabank Community-based Cohort Study

  • Takamasa Kobayashi,
  • Takahito Nasu,
  • Mamoru Satoh,
  • Yuka Kotozaki,
  • Kozo Tanno,
  • Koichi Asahi,
  • Hideki Ohmomo,
  • Atsushi Shimizu,
  • Shinichi Omama,
  • Hiroto Kikuchi,
  • Satoru Taguchi,
  • Yoshihiro Morino,
  • Kenji Sobue,
  • Makoto Sasaki

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22
p. 100212

Abstract

Read online

Elevated levels of circulating high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTnT) are associated with cardiovascular disease. This study aimed to examine whether hs-cTnT levels are associated with incident stroke in the elderly population.The Iwate Tohoku Medical Megabank Organization pooled participant data for a community-based cohort study (n = 15,063, 69.6 ± 3.4 years), with a mean follow-up period of 5.23 years for all-cause death and incident stroke. The follow-up revealed 316 incident strokes, including atherothrombotic (n = 98), cardioembolic (n = 54), lacunar (n = 63), hemorrhagic (n = 101), and 178 all-cause deaths. Participants were classified into quartiles according to hs-cTnT levels (Q1 ≦ 4 ng/L, Q2: 5–6 ng/L, Q3: 7–9 ng/L, and Q4 > 9 ng/L). After adjusting for sex, age, smoking, drinking, systolic blood pressure, estimated glomerular filtration rate, N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide, hemoglobin A1c, and lipid profile, a Cox proportional hazard model showed that higher hs-cTnT levels were associated with ischemic stroke (Q1 vs. Q4, hazard ratio [HR] = 2.24, 95 % confidence interval [CI] = 1.12–4.51, p = 0.023). The incident of total stroke was not associated with hs-cTnT levels (Q1 vs. Q4, HR 1.39, 95 % CI = 0.89–1.74, p = 0.145). Numerical differences were highest regarding incident lacunar stroke subtypes; however, this association was not statistically significant.Higher hs-cTnT concentrations were associated with ischemic stroke in the elderly Japanese population.

Keywords