Optimal Screening for Predicting and Preventing the Risk of Heart Failure Among Adults With Diabetes Without Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease: A Pooled Cohort Analysis

Author:

Patel Kershaw V.1ORCID,Segar Matthew W.2ORCID,Klonoff David C.3ORCID,Khan Muhammad Shahzeb4ORCID,Usman Muhammad Shariq5,Lam Carolyn S.P.6ORCID,Verma Subodh7ORCID,DeFilippis Andrew P.8,Nasir Khurram1ORCID,Bakker Stephan J.L.9ORCID,Westenbrink B. Daan10ORCID,Dullaart Robin P.F.9ORCID,Butler Javed11ORCID,Vaduganathan Muthiah11ORCID,Pandey Ambarish5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiology, Houston Methodist DeBakey Heart & Vascular Center, TX (K.V.P., K.N.).

2. Department of Cardiology, Texas Heart Institute, Houston (M.W.S.).

3. Diabetes Research Institute, Mills-Peninsula Medical Center, San Mateo, CA (D.C.K.).

4. Division of Cardiology, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC (M.S.K.).

5. Division of Cardiology, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas (M.S.U., A.P.).

6. National Heart Centre Singapore, Duke-National University of Singapore (C.S.P.L).

7. Division of Cardiac Surgery, St Michael’s Hospital, University of Toronto, Canada (S.V.).

8. Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN (A.P.D.).

9. Department of Internal Medicine (S.J.L.B., R.P.F.D.), University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, The Netherlands.

10. Department of Cardiology (B.D.W.), University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, The Netherlands.

11. Department of Medicine, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson (J.B.).

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The optimal approach to identify individuals with diabetes who are at a high risk for developing heart failure (HF) to inform implementation of preventive therapies is unknown, especially in those without atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD). METHODS: Adults with diabetes and no HF at baseline from 7 community-based cohorts were included. Participants without ASCVD who were at high risk for developing HF were identified using 1-step screening strategies: risk score (WATCH-DM [Weight, Age, Hypertension, Creatinine, HDL-C, Diabetes Control, QRS Duration, MI, and CABG] ≥12), NT-proBNP (N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide ≥125 pg/mL), hs-cTn (high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T ≥14 ng/L; hs-cTnI ≥31 ng/L), and echocardiography-based diabetic cardiomyopathy (echo-DbCM; left atrial enlargement, left ventricular hypertrophy, or diastolic dysfunction). High-risk participants were also identified using 2-step screening strategies with a second test to identify residual risk among those deemed low risk by the first test: WATCH-DM/NT-proBNP, NT-proBNP/hs-cTn, NT-proBNP/echo-DbCM. Across screening strategies, the proportion of HF events identified, 5-year number needed to treat and number needed to screen to prevent 1 HF event with an SGLT2i (sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitor) among high-risk participants, and cost of screening were estimated. RESULTS: The initial study cohort included 6293 participants (48.2% women), of whom 77.7% without prevalent ASCVD were evaluated with different HF screening strategies. At 5-year follow-up, 6.2% of participants without ASCVD developed incident HF. The 5-year number needed to treat to prevent 1 HF event with an SGLT2i among participants without ASCVD was 43 (95% CI, 29–72). In the cohort without ASCVD, high-risk participants identified using 1-step screening strategies had a low 5-year number needed to treat (22 for NT-proBNP to 37 for echo-DbCM). However, a substantial proportion of HF events occurred among participants identified as low risk using 1-step screening approaches (29% for echo-DbCM to 47% for hs-cTn). Two-step screening strategies captured most HF events (75–89%) in the high-risk subgroup with a comparable 5-year number needed to treat as the 1-step screening approaches (30–32). The 5-year number needed to screen to prevent 1 HF event was similar across 2-step screening strategies (45–61). However, the number of tests and associated costs were lowest for WATCH-DM/NT-proBNP ($1061) compared with other 2-step screening strategies (NT-proBNP/hs-cTn: $2894; NT-proBNP/echo-DbCM: $16 358). CONCLUSIONS: Selective NT-proBNP testing based on the WATCH-DM score efficiently identified a high-risk primary prevention population with diabetes expected to derive marked absolute benefits from SGLT2i to prevent HF.

Funder

NIH NHLBI

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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