Hellenic Journal of Cardiology (Sep 2019)

Subgroups of monocytes predict cardiovascular events in patients with coronary heart disease. The PHAMOS trial (Prospective Halle Monocytes Study)What this paper addsWhat is known about this topic

  • Florian Höpfner,
  • Marrit Jacob,
  • Christof Ulrich,
  • Martin Russ,
  • Andreas Simm,
  • Rolf E. Silber,
  • Matthias Girndt,
  • Michel Noutsias,
  • Karl Werdan,
  • Axel Schlitt

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 60, no. 5
pp. 311 – 321

Abstract

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Background: Monocytes can be differentiated by the presence of CD14 and CD16 (CD14++CD16-, classical; CD14++CD16+, intermediate and CD14 + CD16++, non-classical monocytes). Recent studies have reported conflicting results regarding an association between subtypes of monocytes as defined by the expression of these two surface markers in atherosclerosis. Methods: We investigated subtypes of monocytes in n = 994 patients with angiographically documented coronary artery disease (CAD). We compared total numbers of monocyte subgroups stratified by tertiles with the occurrence of the pre-defined combined endpoint (non-fatal myocardial infarction, cardiovascular death and non-haemorrhagic cerebral insult). Patients were followed up for a minimum of 52 weeks. Classical risk factors of coronary heart disease were included in multivariate analysis. Results: The primary endpoint occurred 134 times at a median time of 34.5 weeks (IR 10.6/59.6). Intermediate (p = 0.813), non-classical (p = 0.725) and the number of total monocytes (p = 0.626) stratified by tertiles showed no significant association with the combined endpoint. However, a higher absolute number of classical monocytes divided in tertiles was associated with incidence of the combined endpoint {T1 = 8.9% vs T2 = 14.2% vs T3 = 16.0% (p = 0.021)}. When comparing the third with the first tertile of Mo1 population, multivariate analysis showed a hazard ratio of 1.646 (CI: 1.005-2.699, p = 0.048). Conclusions: The absolute counts of classical monocytes divided in tertiles are predictive of major adverse cardiac events in patients with CAD. A tremendous shift from classical to intermediate monocytes was also confirmed in patients with CAD. These data highlight the importance of CD14++ monocytes in cardiovascular diseases. Key Words: Atherosclerosis, Cardiovascular disease, CD14, CD16, Monocytes