BMJ Open (Apr 2022)

Cohort profile: ‘Biomarkers of Personalised Medicine’ (BioPersMed): a single-centre prospective observational cohort study in Graz/Austria to evaluate novel biomarkers in cardiovascular and metabolic diseases

  • Burkert Pieske,
  • Gerald Seidel,
  • Andreas Zirlik,
  • Thomas R Pieber,
  • Andreas Wedrich,
  • Andreas Tomaschitz,
  • Markus Wallner,
  • Elisabeth Pieske-Kraigher,
  • Christoph Walter Haudum,
  • Ewald Kolesnik,
  • Caterina Colantonio,
  • Ines Mursic,
  • Marion Url-Michitsch,
  • Theresa Glantschnig,
  • Barbara Hutz,
  • Alice Lind,
  • Natascha Schweighofer,
  • Clemens Reiter,
  • Klemens Ablasser,
  • Norbert Joachim Tripolt,
  • Tobias Madl,
  • Alexander Springer,
  • Thomas Krahn,
  • Rudolf Stauber,
  • Nicolas Verheyen,
  • Barbara Obermayer-Pietsch,
  • Albrecht Schmidt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-058890
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4

Abstract

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Purpose Accumulating evidence points towards a close relationship between cardiovascular, endocrine and metabolic diseases. The BioPersMed Study (Biomarkers of Personalised Medicine) is a single-centre prospective observational cohort study with repetitive examination of participants in 2-year intervals. The aim is to evaluate the predictive impact of various traditional and novel biomarkers of cardiovascular, endocrine and metabolic pathways in asymptomatic individuals at risk for cardiovascular and/or metabolic disease.Participants Between 2010 and 2016, we recruited 1022 regional individuals into the study. Subjects aged 45 years or older presenting with at least one traditional cardiovascular risk factor or manifest type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) were enrolled. The mean age of the participants was 57±8 years, 55% were female, 18% had T2DM, 33% suffered from arterial hypertension, 15% were smokers, 42% had hyperlipidaemia, and only 26% were at low cardiovascular risk according to the Framingham ‘Systematic COronary Risk Evaluation’.Findings to date Study procedures during screening and follow-up visits included a physical examination and comprehensive cardiovascular, endocrine, metabolic, ocular and laboratory workup with biobanking of blood and urine samples. The variety of assessed biomarkers allows a full phenotyping of individuals at cardiovascular and metabolic risk. Preliminary data from the cohort and relevant biomarker analyses were already used as control population for genomic studies in local and international research cooperation.Future plans Participants will undergo comprehensive cardiovascular, endocrine and metabolic examinations for the next decades and clinical outcomes will be adjudicated prospectively.