Metabolic Profiling Associates with Disease Severity in Nonischemic Dilated Cardiomyopathy
Publication year
2020Source
Journal of Cardiac Failure, 26, 3, (2020), pp. 212-222ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
Human Genetics
Journal title
Journal of Cardiac Failure
Volume
vol. 26
Issue
iss. 3
Page start
p. 212
Page end
p. 222
Subject
Radboudumc 7: Neurodevelopmental disorders DCMN: Donders Center for Medical NeuroscienceAbstract
BACKGROUND: Metabolomic profiling may have diagnostic and prognostic value in heart failure. This study investigated whether targeted blood and urine metabolomics reflects disease severity in patients with nonischemic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and compared its incremental value on top of N-terminal prohormone of brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP). METHODS AND RESULTS: A total of 149 metabolites were measured in plasma and urine samples of 273 patients with DCM and with varying stages of disease (patients with DCM and normal left ventricular reverse remodeling, n=70; asymptomatic DCM, n=72; and symptomatic DCM, n=131). Acylcarnitines, sialic acid and glutamic acid are the most distinctive metabolites associated with disease severity, as repeatedly revealed by unibiomarker linear regression, sparse partial least squares discriminant analysis, random forest, and conditional random forest analyses. However, the absolute difference in the metabolic profile among groups was marginal. A decision-tree model based on the top metabolites did not surpass NT-proBNP in classifying stages. However, a combination of NT-proBNP and the top metabolites improved the decision tree to distinguish patients with DCM and left ventricular reverse remodeling from symptomatic DCM (area under the curve 0.813 +/- 0.138 vs 0.739 +/- 0.114; P=0.02). CONCLUSION: Functional cardiac recovery is reflected in metabolomics. These alterations reveal potential alternative treatment targets in advanced symptomatic DCM. The metabolic profile can complement NT-proBNP in determining disease severity in nonischemic DCM.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [227425]
- Electronic publications [107155]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [86157]
- Open Access publications [76291]
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