Background: Neither profiles nor prognostic values of neurohormonal markers have been prospectively evaluated in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) undergoing primary angioplasty.
Methods and results: In 118 consecutive patients with AMI undergoing successful reperfusion (TIMI 2 and 3) by primary angioplasty, plasma concentrations of norepinephrine, epinephrine and N-terminal proBNP (NT-proBNP) were measured before, 60 min and 10 days after angioplasty. Catecholamine concentrations (mean+/-SEM) rose to a maximum in the first hour after angioplasty (norepinephrine: 602+/-44 ng/L, epinephrine: 213+/-24 ng/L) and returned to normal at day 10. Conversely, NT-proBNP levels maintained a further increase from 799+/-44 pmol/L at baseline to 924+/-54 pmol/L at day 10. A NT-proBNP concentration above median at 60 min post-angioplasty predicted major adverse cardiac events (n=27) during the 18-36 month follow-up with an odds ratio of 5.9 (1.7-20.3) and was superior to catecholamines, to left ventricular ejection fraction and to other established postinfarction risk markers.
Conclusions: In a low-risk cohort of patients with AMI undergoing successful reperfusion therapy, plasma NT-proBNP concentrations are elevated for at least ten days. The prognostic value of early plasma NT-proBNP should be further evaluated concerning its ability to facilitate risk stratification of infarct patients.