Plasma proteome analysis in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension: an observational cohort study
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Article In Press
Author(s)
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Idiopathic and heritable pulmonary arterial hypertension form a rare but molecularly heterogeneous disease group. We aimed to measure and validate differences in plasma concentrations of proteins that are associated with survival in patients with idiopathic or heritable pulmonary arterial hypertension to improve risk stratification. METHODS: In this observational cohort study, we enrolled patients with idiopathic or heritable pulmonary arterial hypertension from London (UK; cohorts 1 and 2), Giessen (Germany; cohort 3), and Paris (France; cohort 4). Blood samples were collected at routine clinical appointment visits, clinical data were collected within 30 days of blood sampling, and biochemical data were collected within 7 days of blood sampling. We used an aptamer-based assay of 1129 plasma proteins, and patient clinical details were concealed to the technicians. We identified a panel of prognostic proteins, confirmed with alternative targeted assays, which we evaluated against the established prognostic risk equation for pulmonary arterial hypertension derived from the REVEAL registry. All-cause mortality was the primary endpoint. FINDINGS: 20 proteins differentiated survivors and non-survivors in 143 consecutive patients with idiopathic or heritable pulmonary arterial hypertension with 2 years' follow-up (cohort 1) and in a further 75 patients with 2·5 years' follow-up (cohort 2). Nine proteins were both prognostic independent of plasma NT-proBNP concentrations and confirmed by targeted assays. The functions of these proteins relate to myocardial stress, inflammation, pulmonary vascular cellular dysfunction and structural dysregulation, iron status, and coagulation. A cutoff-based score using the panel of nine proteins provided prognostic information independent of the REVEAL equation, improving the C statistic from area under the curve 0·83 (for REVEAL risk score, 95% CI 0·77-0·89; p<0·0001) to 0·91 (for panel and REVEAL 0·87-0·96; p<0·0001) and improving reclassification indices without detriment to calibration. Poor survival was preceded by an adverse change in panel score in paired samples from 43 incident patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension in cohort 3 (p=0·0133). The protein panel was validated in 93 patients with idiopathic or heritable pulmonary arterial hypertension in cohort 4, with 4·4 years' follow-up and improved risk estimates, providing complementary information to the clinical risk equation. INTERPRETATION: A combination of nine circulating proteins identifies patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension with a high risk of mortality, independent of existing clinical assessments, and might have a use in clinical management and the evaluation of new therapies.
Date Issued
2017-06-14
Date Acceptance
2017-06-01
Citation
Lancet Respiratory Medicine, 2017, 5 (9), pp.717-726
ISSN
2213-2600
Publisher
Elsevier
Start Page
717
End Page
726
Journal / Book Title
Lancet Respiratory Medicine
Volume
5
Issue
9
Copyright Statement
© The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY
4.0 licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
4.0 licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Sponsor
Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust
National Institute for Health Research
British Heart Foundation
British Heart Foundation
British Heart Foundation
Wellcome Trust
Medical Research Council (MRC)
Identifier
PII: S2213-2600(17)30161-3
Grant Number
N/A
84800
FS/15/59/31839
RG68204 13/EE/0203 A092860
RG/10/16/28575
103378/Z/13/Z
MC_PC_14100
Subjects
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Critical Care Medicine
Respiratory System
General & Internal Medicine
PREDICTING SURVIVAL
EXPRESSION
IDENTIFICATION
BIOMARKERS
DIAGNOSIS
RECEPTOR
ST2
Adult
Aged
Arterial Pressure
Biomarkers
Blood Proteins
Cohort Studies
Familial Primary Pulmonary Hypertension
Female
Humans
Hypertension
Male
Middle Aged
Proteome
Risk Assessment
Risk Factors
Humans
Hypertension
Blood Proteins
Proteome
Risk Assessment
Risk Factors
Cohort Studies
Adult
Aged
Middle Aged
Female
Male
Arterial Pressure
Familial Primary Pulmonary Hypertension
Biomarkers
1103 Clinical Sciences
1117 Public Health and Health Services
1199 Other Medical and Health Sciences
Publication Status
Published
Date Publish Online
2017-06-15