Association of Modifiable Lifestyle Risk Factors with High-Sensitivity Troponin T and I Concentrations and Clinical Outcomes

Eur J Prev Cardiol. 2024 Nov 26:zwae374. doi: 10.1093/eurjpc/zwae374. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Aims: We aimed to investigate the association between the burden of modifiable lifestyle risk factors (modLRF) with high-sensitivity cardiac troponins T and I (hsTnT/I) and clinical outcomes in a contemporary cohort.

Methods: Patients undergoing coronary angiography with available hsTnT/I concentrations and information about modLRF were included in the current single-centre study. The modLRF investigated were overweight, lack of physical activity, poor adherence to a Mediterranean diet and current smoking. To evaluate the impact of modLRF on hsTnT/I levels, a linear regression model was used. A Cox regression analysis was computed to investigate the association of hsTnT/I levels with clinical outcomes, stratified by the burden of modLRF, and a C-Index was calculated to investigate the additive predictive benefit of the integration of hsTn on top of a base model containing modLRF only. Outcomes of interest were all-cause mortality and major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE).

Results: In the overall study population of n=1,716 patients median troponin levels were 15.0 ng/l (IQR 8.0, 29.0) and 7.6 ng/l (IQR 3.3, 18.6) for hsTnT and I, respectively. An increasing number of modLRF was independently associated with elevated hsTnT and I concentrations. Moreover, hsTnT and hsTnI were independently associated with all-cause mortality in patients with 1-2 and ≥3 modLRF, and an incremental value of the integration of hsTnT and hsTnI was noted, especially in the prediction of all-cause mortality was noted. Lastly, an independent association of hsTnI with MACE was documented in patients with 1-2 modLRF, which was not the case for hsTnT.

Conclusion: Increasing numbers of modLRF are associated with elevated concentrations of hsTnT and I, whilst the predictive capability of troponins varied according to the presence of modLRF. Further prospective studies are needed to investigate, whether targeting modLRF might result in lower hsTn concentrations and improved outcomes.

Keywords: Coronary artery disease; high-sensitivity troponin; modifiable lifestyle risk factors; risk prediction.

Plain language summary

This study investigated whether certain lifestyle risk factors, such as being overweight, lack of exercise, current smoking, and a poor diet, affect the levels of specific heart damage markers in the blood (high-sensitivity troponin T and I) as well as clinical outcomes. - Patients with a number burden of unhealthy lifestyle factors had higher levels of both heart damage markers in their blood. - How well troponin blood levels could predict health outcomes varied significantly based on a number of lifestyle risk factors.