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Clinical Utility of BNP Testing in Heart Failure

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Clinical Utility of BNP Testing in Heart Failure. Adam Werne, MD. Cardiology Fellow. St. Vincent Hospital – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Clinical Utility of BNP Testing in Heart Failure


1
Clinical Utility of BNP Testing in Heart
Failure
  • Adam Werne, MD
  • Cardiology Fellow
  • St. Vincent Hospital

2
Heart Failure Pathophysiology
  • Baig MK, Mahon N, McKenna WJ, et al. The
    pathophysiology of advanced heart failure.
    American Heart Journal 135 S216-30, 1998.

3
Diagnosis of Heart Failure
  • The cardinal manifestations of heart failure are
    dyspnea, fatigue, and fluid retention leading to
    exercise intolerance, pulmonary congestion, and
    peripheral edema.
  • Risk of developing heart failure strongly
    correlates with increasing age.
  • The diagnosis of heart failure remains a clinical
    one based primarily on signs and symptoms derived
    from a thorough history and physical examination.
  • Elevated jugular venous pressure is the most
    specific finding.
  • Response to diuretic therapy can help confirm the
    diagnosis in difficult cases.
  • Echocardiography is the single most useful
    diagnostic test in the evaluation of patients
    with heart failure.
  • Jessup M, Abraham WT, Casey DE, et al. 2009
    Focused Update ACCF/AHA guidelines for the
    diagnosis and management of heart failure in
    adults. Journal of the American College of
    Cardiology 53 1343-82, 2009.

4
Natriuretic Peptides
  • Brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) is a hormone
    initially identified in the brain but released
    primarily from the ventricles of the heart in
    response to myocardial cell stretch from
    increased volume, filling pressures, and wall
    tension.
  • Cleavage of the prohormone proBNP produces the
    biologically active 32 amino acid BNP as well as
    the inert N-terminal pro-BNP, both of which can
    be measured by commercially available assays.
  • Maisel A, Mueller C, Adams K Jr, et al. State
    of the art using natriuretic peptide levels in
    clinical practice. European Journal of Heart
    Failure 10 824-39, 2008.

5
Physiologic effects of BNP include diuresis,
afterload reduction, and neuro-hormonal
modulation.
  • Baig MK, Mahon N, McKenna WJ, et al. The
    pathophysiology of advanced heart failure.
    American Heart Journal 135 S216-30, 1998.

6
Elevated BNP levels are associated with
LV dysfunction by echocardiography.
416
30
LV Function by Echocardiography
  • Krishnaswamy P, Lubien E, Clopton P, et al.
    Utility of B-natriuretic peptide levels in
    identifying patients with left ventricular
    systolic or diastolic dysfunction. American
    Journal of Medicine 111 274-9, 2001.

7
BNP levels are increased in both systolic and
diastolic dysfunction of the left ventricle.
Echocardiographic Findings
  • Krishnaswamy P, Lubien E, Clopton P, et al.
    Utility of B-natriuretic peptide levels in
    identifying patients with left ventricular
    systolic or diastolic dysfunction. American
    Journal of Medicine 111 274-9, 2001.

8
Elevated BNP levels suggest a diagnosis of
heart failure in dyspnea of uncertain etiology.
675
110
346
No HF (N 770)
Dyspnea due to HF(N 744)
Noncardiac dyspnea in pts w/ LV dysfx (N72)
  • Maisel AS, Krishnaswamy P, Nowak RM, et al.
    Rapid measurement of B-type natriuretic peptide
    in the emergency diagnosis of heart failure. New
    England Journal of Medicine 347 161-7, 2002.

9
BNP levels increase incrementally with worsening
heart failure symptoms.
  • Maisel AS, Krishnaswamy P, Nowak RM, et al.
    Rapid measurement of B-type natriuretic peptide
    in the emergency diagnosis of heart failure. New
    England Journal of Medicine 347 161-7, 2002.

10
BNP levels less than 100 are very sensitive for
excluding heart failure as a cause of dyspnea.
Sensitivity 90 Specificity 76
  • Maisel AS, Krishnaswamy P, Nowak RM, et al.
    Rapid measurement of B-type natriuretic peptide
    in the emergency diagnosis of heart failure. New
    England Journal of Medicine 347 161-7, 2002.

11
BNP levels should be interpreted in the context
of a patients clinical characteristics.
  • Strunk A, Bhalla V, Clopton P, et al. Impact of
    the history of congestive heart failure on the
    utility of B-type natriuretic peptide in the
    emergency diagnosis of heart failure results
    from the breathing not properly multinational
    study. Am J Med 119 69e.1 11, 2006.

12
BNP levels vary with age, gender, weight, and
comorbid conditions.
  • Increased BNP
  • Advanced age
  • Male gender
  • Renal failure
  • Atrial fibrillation
  • Coronary artery disease
  • Pulmonary HTN
  • Decreased BNP
  • Young age
  • Female gender
  • Obesity
  • Tang WHW, Girod JP, Lee MJ, et al . Plasma
    B-type natriuretic peptide levels in ambulatory
    patients with established chronic symptomatic
    systolic heart failure. Circulation 108 2964-6,
    2003.

13
BNP levels correlate with mortality
in patients with heart failure.
  • Anand IS, Fisher LD, Chiang YT, et al. Changes
    in brain natriuretic peptide and norepinephrine
    over time and mortality and morbidity in the
    valsartan heart failure trial (Val-HeFT).
    Circulation 1071278-83, 2003.

14
Data are mixed regarding the efficacy of using
BNP levels to guide heart failure therapy.
  • Jourdain P, Jondeau G, Funck F, et al. Plasma
    brain natriuretic peptide-guided therapy to
    improve outcome in heart failure the STARS-BNP
    multicenter study. Journal of the American
    College of Cardiology 49 1733-9, 2007.
  • Pfisterer M, Buser P, Rickli H, et al.
    BNP-guided vs symptom-guided heart failure
    therapy the trial of intensified vs standard
    medical therapy in elderly patients With
    congestive heart failure (TIME-CHF) randomized
    trial. JAMA 301 383-92, 2009.

15
Conclusions
  • Elevated BNP levels are associated with left
    ventricular dysfunction by echocardiography (both
    systolic and diastolic).
  • BNP levels can help confirm or exclude a clinical
    diagnosis of heart failure in patients with
    dyspnea of uncertain etiology.
  • Levels less than 100 have good negative
    predictive value.
  • Levels greater than 500 have good positive
    predictive value.
  • Values are affected by age, gender, weight, and
    comorbidities.
  • BNP should be assessed in all patients suspected
    of having heart failure when the diagnosis is not
    certain (inpatient or outpatient).
  • BNP levels have prognostic significance in
    patients with heart failure.
  • Titration of heart failure therapy based on BNP
    level is not routinely recommended at this time.

16
References
  • Anand IS, Fisher LD, Chiang YT, et al. Changes
    in brain natriuretic peptide and norepinephrine
    over time and mortality and morbidity in the
    valsartan heart failure trial (Val-HeFT).
    Circulation 1071278-83, 2003.
  • Baig MK, Mahon N, McKenna WJ, et al. The
    pathophysiology of advanced heart failure.
    American Heart Journal 135 S216-30, 1998.
  • Jessup M, Abraham WT, Casey DE, et al. 2009
    Focused Update ACCF/AHA guidelines for the
    diagnosis and management of heart failure in
    adults. Journal of the American College of
    Cardiology 53 1343-82, 2009.
  • Jourdain P, Jondeau G, Funck F, et al. Plasma
    brain natriuretic peptide-guided therapy to
    improve outcome in heart failure the STARS-BNP
    multicenter study. Journal of the American
    College of Cardiology 49 1733-9, 2007.
  • Krishnaswamy P, Lubien E, Clopton P, et al.
    Utility of B-natriuretic peptide levels in
    identifying patients with left ventricular
    systolic or diastolic dysfunction. American
    Journal of Medicine 111 274-9, 2001.
  • Maisel AS, Krishnaswamy P, Nowak RM, et al.
    Rapid measurement of B-type natriuretic peptide
    in the emergency diagnosis of heart failure. New
    England Journal of Medicine 347 161-7, 2002.
  • Maisel A, Mueller C, Adams K Jr, et al. State of
    the art using natriuretic peptide levels in
    clinical practice. European Journal of Heart
    Failure 10 824-39, 2008.
  • Pfisterer M, Buser P, Rickli H, et al.
    BNP-guided vs symptom-guided heart failure
    therapy the trial of intensified vs standard
    medical therapy in elderly patients With
    congestive heart failure (TIME-CHF) randomized
    trial. JAMA 301 383-92, 2009.
  • Strunk A, Bhalla V, Clopton P, et al. Impact of
    the history of congestive heart failure on the
    utility of B-type natriuretic peptide in the
    emergency diagnosis of heart failure results
    from the breathing not properly multinational
    study. American Journal of Medicine 119 69e.1
    11, 2006.
  • Tang WHW, Girod JP, Lee MJ, et al . Plasma
    B-type natriuretic peptide levels in ambulatory
    patients with established chronic symptomatic
    systolic heart failure. Circulation 108 2964-6,
    2003.
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