Copeptin is associated with mortality in elderly peopleShow others and affiliations
2021 (English)In: European Journal of Clinical Investigation, ISSN 0014-2972, E-ISSN 1365-2362, Vol. 51, no 7, article id e13516Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
Background: Elevated copeptin, a marker for vasopressin release, has been associated with impaired prognosis in acute myocardial infarction (MI). The aim was to investigate whether this association extends beyond the acute phase and whether it is related to markers of stress (cortisol) and heart failure (NTproBNP). Methods: Copeptin, cortisol and NTproBNP were measured in 926 participants (age: 76.0; male: 48.5%) in the ICELAND MI study whereof 246 had a previous MI (91 recognizable (RMI) and 155 previously unrecognizable (UMI) detected by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging). The primary endpoint was cardiovascular events (CVEs), and secondary endpoints were total mortality, heart failure and MI (median follow-up was 9.1 years). The relation between copeptin and prognosis was assessed with the Cox proportional hazard regression (unadjusted, adjusted for cortisol and NTproBNP, respectively, and a multiple model: copeptin, cortisol, NTproBNP, age, sex, serum creatinine, heart failure). Results: Copeptin was higher in participants with MI (8.9 vs. 6.4 pmol/L; P <.01), with no difference between RMI vs. UMI. Increased copeptin correlated with evening cortisol (r =.11; P <.01) and NTproBNP (r =.07; P =.04). Copeptin was associated with CVE and total mortality after adjusting for cortisol and NTproBNP separately, and remained significantly associated with total mortality in the multiple model. Conclusions: Copeptin was higher in subjects with previous MI regardless whether previously recognized or not. Copeptin correlated weakly with cortisol and NTproBNP, and was independently associated with total mortality. This indicates that the prognostic implications of copeptin are not only mediated by heart failure or stress, supporting the assumption that copeptin is a marker of general vulnerability.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
John Wiley and Sons Inc , 2021. Vol. 51, no 7, article id e13516
Keywords [en]
copeptin, cortisol, myocardial infarction, NTproBNP, unknown myocardial infarction, vasopressin, amino terminal pro brain natriuretic peptide, biological marker, creatinine, hydrocortisone, acute heart infarction, aged, aging, all cause mortality, Article, cardiovascular disease, cardiovascular magnetic resonance, cohort analysis, controlled study, creatinine blood level, female, follow up, heart failure, human, major clinical study, male, mortality, physiological stress, prognostic assessment, protein blood level, vulnerable population
National Category
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Disease
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-305486DOI: 10.1111/eci.13516ISI: 000619178600001PubMedID: 33569762Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85100905812OAI: oai:DiVA.org:kth-305486DiVA, id: diva2:1615473
Note
QC 20211130
2021-11-302021-11-302025-02-10Bibliographically approved