Innate and Adaptive Immunity-Related Markers as Predictors of the Short-Term Progression of Subclinical Atherosclerosis in Middle-Aged Patients

Author:

Genkel Vadim1ORCID,Dolgushin Ilya1,Savochkina Albina1,Nikushkina Karina1,Baturina Irina1,Minasova Anna1,Sumerkina Veronika1,Pykhova Lubov1,Kupriyanov Semen1,Kuznetsova Alla1,Shaposhnik Igor1

Affiliation:

1. Federal State Budgetary Educational Institution of Higher Education “South-Ural State Medical University” of the Ministry of Healthcare of the Russian Federation, 454092 Chelyabinsk, Russia

Abstract

Assessment of inflammation is a promising approach to monitoring the progression of asymptomatic atherosclerosis. The aim of the present study was to investigate the predictive value of innate and adaptive immunity-related markers, in relation to the short-term progression of subclinical atherosclerosis. The study included 183 patients aged 40–64 years who underwent duplex scanning of the carotid and lower limb arteries at two visits with an interval of 12–24 months between examinations. Phenotyping of circulating lymphocytes and monocytes subpopulations were performed through flow cytometry. An increase in the number of circulating TLR4-positive intermediate monocytes (>447.0–467.0 cells/μL) was an independent predictor of the short-term progression of lower limb artery atherosclerosis (p < 0.0001) and polyvascular atherosclerosis (p = 0.003). The assessment of TLR4-positive monocytes significantly improved the prognostic model for the progression of lower limb arterial atherosclerosis (C-index 0.728 (0.642–0.815) versus 0.637 (0.539–0.735); p = 0.038). An increase in the number of circulating TLR4-positive intermediate monocytes was an independent predictor of the short-term progression of lower limb artery and polyvascular atherosclerosis. Their inclusion into models containing conventional risk factors significantly improved their prognostic effectiveness regarding lower limb artery atherosclerosis progression.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Computer Science Applications,Spectroscopy,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Catalysis

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