PLoS ONE (Jan 2011)

Blood signature of pre-heart failure: a microarrays study.

  • Fatima Smih,
  • Franck Desmoulin,
  • Matthieu Berry,
  • Annie Turkieh,
  • Romain Harmancey,
  • Jason Iacovoni,
  • Charlotte Trouillet,
  • Clement Delmas,
  • Atul Pathak,
  • Olivier Lairez,
  • François Koukoui,
  • Pierre Massabuau,
  • Jean Ferrieres,
  • Michel Galinier,
  • Philippe Rouet

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0020414
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 6
p. e20414

Abstract

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The preclinical stage of systolic heart failure (HF), known as asymptomatic left ventricular dysfunction (ALVD), is diagnosed only by echocardiography, frequent in the general population and leads to a high risk of developing severe HF. Large scale screening for ALVD is a difficult task and represents a major unmet clinical challenge that requires the determination of ALVD biomarkers.294 individuals were screened by echocardiography. We identified 9 ALVD cases out of 128 subjects with cardiovascular risk factors. White blood cell gene expression profiling was performed using pangenomic microarrays. Data were analyzed using principal component analysis (PCA) and Significant Analysis of Microarrays (SAM). To build an ALVD classifier model, we used the nearest centroid classification method (NCCM) with the ClaNC software package. Classification performance was determined using the leave-one-out cross-validation method. Blood transcriptome analysis provided a specific molecular signature for ALVD which defined a model based on 7 genes capable of discriminating ALVD cases. Analysis of an ALVD patients validation group demonstrated that these genes are accurate diagnostic predictors for ALVD with 87% accuracy and 100% precision. Furthermore, Receiver Operating Characteristic curves of expression levels confirmed that 6 out of 7 genes discriminate for left ventricular dysfunction classification.These targets could serve to enhance the ability to efficiently detect ALVD by general care practitioners to facilitate preemptive initiation of medical treatment preventing the development of HF.