Six-year change in high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T with subsequent stroke risk in the general population.

Pubmed ID: 39304191

Journal: Journal of epidemiology and community health

Publication Date: Jan. 13, 2025

MeSH Terms: Humans, Male, Adult, Female, Aged, Risk Factors, United States, Middle Aged, Risk Assessment, Incidence, Stroke, Biomarkers, Troponin T

Authors: Zhang Y, Su X, Ye Z, He P, Qin X, Gan X, Meng Q, Zu C, Wei Y

Cite As: Meng Q, Gan X, Zu C, Zhang Y, He P, Ye Z, Su X, Wei Y, Qin X. Six-year change in high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T with subsequent stroke risk in the general population. J Epidemiol Community Health 2025 Jan 13;79(2):138-145.

Studies:

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The association between change in high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTnT) and stroke risk in the general population remains unknown. We aimed to assess the association of a 6-year change in hs-cTnT with incident stroke and its subtypes in the general American adult population. METHODS: 8675 middle-aged adults without prevalent cardiovascular disease from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study were included. Hs-cTnT was measured at two time points (visits 2 and 4), 6 years apart. The relative percentage change of hs-cTnT was defined as hs-cTnT at visit 4 minus that at visit 2, divided by hs-cTnT at visit 2. The study outcome was incident stroke and its subtypes. All data were analysed in 2023. RESULTS: Over a median follow-up of 20.1 years, 682 incident strokes occurred, including 593 ischaemic and 89 haemorrhagic strokes. For absolute change, using low/low group as reference category, the low/high (adjusted HR 1.44, 95% CI 1.03 to 2.02) and high/high (adjusted HR 1.47, 95% CI 0.93 to 2.34) groups were associated with higher risk of stroke. Moreover, the relative percentage change in hs-cTnT with stroke followed an inverted L-shaped association, levelling off at about 75% increase in hs-cTnT (P for nonlinearity=0.009). Compared with those with ≤50% change in hs-cTnT, participants with >50% increase in hs-cTnT had a higher risk of stroke (adjusted HR 1.30, 95% CI 1.03 to 1.64). Similar results were found for ischaemic stroke. No significant association was found for haemorrhagic stroke. CONCLUSION: Temporal increase in hs-cTnT was associated with a higher risk of incident total and ischaemic stroke in the general population.