Authors |
Khera
A, de Lemos JA, Peshock RM, Lo HS, Stanek HG, Murphy SA, Wians FH Jr,
Grundy SM, McGuire DK.
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Abstract |
BACKGROUND:
Elevated levels of C-reactive protein (CRP) are associated with increased
risk for incident cardiovascular events on the basis of observations from
several prospective epidemiological studies. However, less is known regarding
the relationship between CRP levels and atherosclerotic burden.
METHODS AND RESULTS: We measured CRP in 3373 subjects 30 to 65 years of
age who were participating in the Dallas Heart Study, a multiethnic, population-based,
probability sample. Electron-beam CT scans were used to measure coronary
artery calcification (CAC) in 2726 of these subjects, and MRI was used
to measure aortic plaque in 2393. CRP levels were associated with most
traditional cardiovascular risk factors. Subjects with CAC had higher
median CRP levels than those without CAC (men: median, 2.4 versus 1.8
mg/L, P<0.001; women: median, 5.2 versus 3.6 mg/L, P<0.001), and
there was a modest trend toward increasing CRP levels with increased CAC
levels in men (P for trend=0.003) but not in women (P for trend=0.08).
Male subjects with aortic plaque also had higher CRP levels than those
without (median, 2.3 versus 1.8; P<0.001). In multivariate analysis
adjusted for traditional cardiovascular risk factors, body mass index,
and estrogen and statin medication use, the associations between CRP levels
and CAC and CRP levels and aortic plaque were no longer statistically
significant.
CONCLUSIONS: In a large, population-based sample, subjects with higher
CRP levels had a modest increase in the prevalence of subclinical atherosclerosis,
but this association was not independent of traditional cardiovascular
risk factors. CRP is a poor predictor of atherosclerotic burden.
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