PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Multi-system trajectories and the incidence of heart failure in the Framingham Offspring Study.

  • Cara E Guardino,
  • Stephanie Pan,
  • Ramachandran S Vasan,
  • Vanessa Xanthakis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0268576
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 5
p. e0268576

Abstract

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BackgroundHeart failure is a multi-system disease, with non-cardiac systems playing a key role in disease pathogenesis.ObjectiveInvestigate whether longitudinal multi-system trajectories incrementally predict heart failure risk compared to single-occasion traits.MethodsWe evaluated 3,412 participants from the Framingham Heart Study Offspring cohort, free of heart failure, who attended examination cycle 5 and at least one examination between 1995-2008 (mean age 67 years, 54% women). We related trajectories for the following organ systems and metabolic functions to heart failure risk using Cox regression: kidney (estimated glomerular filtration rate), lung (forced vital capacity and the ratio of forced expiratory volume in one second/forced vital capacity), neuromotor (gait time), muscular (grip strength), cardiac (left ventricular mass index and heart rate), vascular function (pulse pressure), cholesterol (ratio of total/high-density lipoprotein), adiposity (body mass index), inflammation (C-reactive protein) and glucose homeostasis (hemoglobin A1c). Using traits selected via forward selection, we derived a trajectory risk score and related it to heart failure risk.ResultsWe observed 276 heart failure events during a median follow up of 10 years. Participants with the 'worst' multi-system trajectory profile had the highest heart failure risk. A one-unit increase in the trajectory risk score was associated with a 2.72-fold increase in heart failure risk (95% CI 2.21-3.34; pConclusionIncorporating multi-system trajectories reflective of the aging process may add incremental information to heart failure risk assessment when compared to using single-occasion traits.