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Title: Combination of heart-type fatty acid binding protein and brain natriuretic peptide can reliably risk stratify patients hospitalized for chronic heart failure. Author: Niizeki T, Takeishi Y, Arimoto T, Takahashi T, Okuyama H, Takabatake N, Nozaki N, Hirono O, Tsunoda Y, Shishido T, Takahashi H, Koyama Y, Fukao A, Kubota I. Journal: Circ J; 2005 Aug; 69(8):922-7. PubMed ID: 16041160. Abstract: BACKGROUND: The aim of the present study was to prospectively study whether a combination of markers for myocardial cell injury and left ventricular overload at admission can reliably risk stratify patients hospitalized for chronic heart failure (CHF). METHODS AND RESULTS: Serum concentrations of heart-type fatty acid binding protein (H-FABP) and plasma concentrations of brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) were measured at admission in 186 consecutive patients hospitalized for CHF. During a mean follow-up period of 534+/-350 days, there were 44 cardiac events, including 16 cardiac deaths and 28 readmissions for worsening heart failure. Normal upper limits for H-FABP and BNP values were determined from the receiver operating characteristic curves (4.3 ng/ml for H-FABP and 200 pg/ml for BNP). A stepwise Cox regression analysis demonstrated that high H-FABP (hazard ratio 5.416, p = 0.0002) and high BNP (hazard ratio 2.411, p = 0.0463) were independent predictors of cardiac events. High concentrations of both H-FABP and BNP at admission were associated with the highest incidence of cardiac mortality and cardiac events. Kaplan-Meier analysis also showed that the combination of H-FABP and BNP concentrations could reliably stratify patients for cardiac events. CONCLUSION: Combined measurement of H-FABP and BNP concentrations at admission may be a highly reliable evaluation for risk stratifying patients hospitalized for CHF.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]