Sex differences in circulating biomarkers of cardiovascular disease

ES Lau, SM Paniagua, JS Guseh, V Bhambhani… - Journal of the American …, 2019 - jacc.org
ES Lau, SM Paniagua, JS Guseh, V Bhambhani, MV Zanni, P Courchesne, A Lyass…
Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 2019jacc.org
Background: Differences in proteomic profiles between men and women may provide
insights into the biological pathways that contribute to known sex differences in
cardiovascular disease (CVD). Objectives: This study sought to investigate sex differences in
circulating biomarkers representative of biological pathways implicated in the development
of CVD among Framingham Heart Study participants. Methods: The authors measured 71
circulating CVD protein biomarkers in 7,184 participants (54% women, mean age 49 years) …
Background
Differences in proteomic profiles between men and women may provide insights into the biological pathways that contribute to known sex differences in cardiovascular disease (CVD).
Objectives
This study sought to investigate sex differences in circulating biomarkers representative of biological pathways implicated in the development of CVD among Framingham Heart Study participants.
Methods
The authors measured 71 circulating CVD protein biomarkers in 7,184 participants (54% women, mean age 49 years). Multivariable models were used to evaluate the associations of sex, menopause, and hormone status with biomarkers. Cox models were used to examine whether sex modified the association of biomarkers with incident CVD.
Results
Of 71 biomarkers examined, 61 (86%) differed significantly between men and women, of which 37 were higher in women (including adipokines and inflammatory markers such as leptin and C-reactive protein), and 24 were higher in men (including fibrosis and platelet markers such as MMP-8 (matrix metalloproteinase-8) and TIMP-1 (tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases 1); false discovery rate q < 0.05 for all). Sex differences in biomarker profiles were most pronounced between pre-menopausal women versus men, with attenuated sex differences among post-menopausal women not taking hormone replacement therapy. Sex modified the association of specific biomarkers with incident CVD, including CD14 and apolipoprotein B (pinteraction <0.05 for all).
Conclusions
In a predominantly Caucasian population, the authors identified widespread sex differences in circulating biomarkers that reflect distinct pathways implicated in CVD, including inflammation, adiposity, fibrosis, and platelet homeostasis. Menopause and hormone status accounted for some, but not all, of the observed sex differences. Further investigation into factors underlying sex-based differences may provide mechanistic insight into CVD development.
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