Circulating Cardiac Biomarkers in Diabetes Mellitus: A New Dawn for Risk Stratification-A Narrative Review

dc.contributor.authorBerezin, A. E.
dc.contributor.authorBerezin, A. A.
dc.contributor.authorБерезін, Олександр Євгенійович
dc.contributor.authorБерезін, А. А.
dc.date.accessioned2021-06-04T06:56:11Z
dc.date.available2021-06-04T06:56:11Z
dc.date.issued2020
dc.description.abstractThe aim of this narrative review is to update the current knowledge on the differential choice of circulating cardiac biomarkers in patients with prediabetes and established type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). There are numerous circulating biomarkers with unconfirmed abilities to predict clinical outcomes in pre-DM and DM individuals; the prognostication ability of the cardiac biomarkers reported here has been established, and they are still being studied. The conventional cardiac biomarkers, such as natriuretic peptides (NPs), soluble suppressor tumorigenisity-2, high-sensitivity circulating cardiac troponins and galectin-3, were useful to ascertain cardiovascular (CV) risk. Each cardiac biomarker has its strengths and weaknesses that affect the price of usage, specificity, sensitivity, predictive value and superiority in face-to-face comparisons. Additionally, there have been confusing reports regarding their abilities to be predictably relevant among patients without known CV disease. The large spectrum of promising cardiac biomarkers (growth/differential factor-15, heart-type fatty acid-binding protein, cardiotrophin-1, carboxy-terminal telopeptide of collagen type 1, apelin and noncoding RNAs) is discussed in the context of predicting CV diseases and events in patients with known prediabetes and T2DM. Various reasons have been critically discussed related to the variable findings regarding biomarker-based prediction of CV risk among patients with metabolic disease. It was found that NPs and hscTnT are still the most important tools that have an affordable price as well as high sensitivity and specificity to predict clinical outcomes among patients with pre-DM and DM in routine clinical practice, but other circulating biomarkers need to be carefully investigated in large trials in the future.uk_UK
dc.identifier.citationBerezin A. E. Circulating Cardiac Biomarkers in Diabetes Mellitus: A New Dawn for Risk Stratification-A Narrative Review / A. E. Berezin, A. А. Berezin // Diabetes Therapy. - 2020. - Vol. 11, № 6. -P.1271–1291. - https://doi.org/10.1007/s13300-020-00835-9uk_UK
dc.identifier.urihttps://zsmu.rosbai.com/handle/123456789/13865
dc.language.isoenuk_UK
dc.subjectCardiac biomarkersuk_UK
dc.subjectCardiovascular riskuk_UK
dc.subjectPrediabetesuk_UK
dc.subjectPrognosticationuk_UK
dc.subjectRisk factorsuk_UK
dc.subjectType 2 diabetes mellitusuk_UK
dc.titleCirculating Cardiac Biomarkers in Diabetes Mellitus: A New Dawn for Risk Stratification-A Narrative Reviewuk_UK
dc.typeArticleuk_UK

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