Potential utility of B-type natriuretic peptides in secondary prevention following percutaneous coronary intervention in remote communities of Western Australia

Peter J. Tually,Geoff Currie,Nat P. Lenzo,Delia V. Hendrie, Jack W. Meadows, Johan H. A. Janssen

BIOMARKERS(2023)

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摘要
IntroductionA third of all acute coronary events that present in the Australian population occur in patients with established coronary heart disease. This study assessed the prognostic value of combined B-type natriuretic peptides (BNP) measurement and quantitative myocardial perfusion scan (MPS) data for cardiac events (CE).Material and methodsThis retrospective cohort study involved 133 patients from rural Western Australia. The cut-off for normality was 6.0 for qualitative summed difference scores (SDS) of MPS and 400 pg/mL for BNP.ResultsPatients with no CE had a mean SDS and BNP (1.52 with a 95% CI of 0.34 to 2.69), (175.9 with a 95% CI of 112.7-239.1) that was lower than patients with CE (6.54 with 95% CI 4.18-9.89) (P = 0.0003), (669.1 with 95% CI 543.9-794.3) (P < 0.0001). The sensitivity and specificity of combined testing for predicting CE respectively were 79.6% and 86.3% for SDS, 84.6% and 94.1% for BNP, and 100% and 92.7% for SDS and BNP combined.Discussion and conclusionElevated BNP is marginally superior to MPS in predicting CEs in patients who have previously undergone percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI); however, MPS can identify the region of myocardium most at risk. Routine BNP monitoring in this subgroup may serve as secondary prevention by identifying subclinical disease. Clinical significanceRural communities are disproportionately affected by preventable coronary heart disease-related deaths and access to cardiac imaging techniques can be infrequent or unavailable.Secondary prevention strategies can reduce hospital readmissions and contribute to improving the management of chronic conditions.This study demonstrated that elevated B-type natriuretic peptides levels were marginally superior to myocardial perfusion scans in predicting cardiac events in patients with prior percutaneous coronary intervention.Monitoring BNP levels in rural patients with prior percutaneous coronary interventions is a relatively non-invasive and inexpensive, and may lead to improved risk estimation, identify the subclinical disease and provoke further investigation as clinically appropriate.
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natriuretic peptides,percutaneous coronary intervention,secondary prevention,western australia,b-type
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