GDF-15: An Emerging Multi-Domain Cardiovascular Biomarker
This comprehensive review establishes growth differentiation factor 15 as a uniquely versatile cardiovascular biomarker that captures disease dimensions not reflected by troponin, natriuretic peptides, or CRP. GDF-15 independently predicts mortality across coronary artery disease, atrial fibrillation, and heart failure, and has been incorporated into a novel bleeding risk score for patients on antithrombotic therapy, opening new avenues for treatment decision support.
The original study
Growth Differentiation Factor 15 as a Biomarker in Cardiovascular Disease.
- Authors
- Wollert KC, Kempf T, Wallentin L
- Journal
- Clinical chemistry
- Type
- Journal Article, Review
- PMID
- 28062617
Original abstract
BACKGROUND: Growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF-15) is expressed and secreted in response to inflammation, oxidative stress, hypoxia, telomere erosion, and oncogene activation. Cardiovascular (CV) disease is a major driver of GDF-15 production. GDF-15 has favorable preanalytic characteristics and can be measured in serum and plasma by immunoassay. CONTENT: In community-dwelling individuals higher concentrations of GDF-15 are associated with increased risks of developing CV disease, chronic kidney disease, and cancer, independent of traditional CV risk factors, renal function, and other biomarkers (C-reactive protein, B-type natriuretic peptide, cardiac troponin). Low concentrations of GDF-15 are closely associated with longevity. GDF-15 is as an independent marker of all-cause mortality and CV events in patients with coronary artery disease, and may help select patients with non-ST-elevation acute coronary syndrome for early revascularization and more intensive medical therapies. GDF-15 is independently associated with mortality and nonfatal events in atrial fibrillation and heart failure (HF) with preserved or reduced ejection fraction. GDF-15 reflects chronic disease burden and acute perturbations in HF and responds to improvements in hemodynamic status. GDF-15 is independently associated with major bleeding in patients receiving antithrombotic therapies and has been included in a new bleeding risk score, which may become useful for decision support. SUMMARY: GDF-15 captures distinct aspects of CV disease development, progression, and prognosis, which are not represented by clinical risk predictors and other biomarkers. The usefulness of GDF-15 to guide management decisions and discover new treatment targets should be further explored.