Cardiac myosin binding protein-C (cMyBP-C) is a heart muscle-specific thick filament protein. Elevated level of serum cMyBP-C is an indicator of early myocardial infarction (MI), but its value as a predictor of future cardiovascular disease is unknown. Based on the presence of significant amount of cMyBP-C in the serum of previous study subjects independent of MI, we hypothesized that circulating cMyBP-C is a sensitive indicator of ongoing cardiovascular stress and disease. To test this hypothesis, 75 men and 83 women of similar ages were recruited for a prospective study. They underwent exercise stress echocardiography to provide pre- and poststress blood samples for subsequent determination of serum cMyBP-C levels. The subjects were followed for 1 to 1.5 years. Exercise stress increased serum cMyBP-C in all subjects. Twenty-seven primary events (such as death, MI, revascularization, invasive cardiovascular procedure, or cardiovascular-related hospitalization) and 7 critical events (CE; such as death, MI, stroke, or pulmonary embolism) occurred. After adjusting for sex and cardiovascular risk factors with multivariate Cox regression, a 96% sensitive prestress cMyBP-C threshold carried a hazard ratio of 8.1 with p = 0.041 for primary events. Most subjects (6 of 7) who had CE showed normal ejection fraction on echocardiography. Pre-stress cMyBP-C demonstrated area under receiver operating curve of 0.91 and multivariate Cox regression hazard ratio of 13.8 (p = 0.000472) for CE. Thus, basal cMyBP-C levels reflected susceptibility for a variety of cardiovascular diseases. Together with its high sensitivity, cMyBP-C holds potential as a screening biomarker for the existence of severe cardiovascular diseases.
Our results support the fact that the majority of patients UAP with prior imaging will have no identifiable organic etiology found on EUS to explain their pain; however, we suggest that EUS be considered in patients with suspected pancreatic or biliary pathology.
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