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  3. Interleukin-6 Predicts Carotid Plaque Severity, Vulnerability, and Progression.
 

Interleukin-6 Predicts Carotid Plaque Severity, Vulnerability, and Progression.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/174542
Date of Publication
July 8, 2022
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Universitätsklinik fü...

Author
Kamtchum-Tatuene, Joseph
Saba, Luca
Heldner, Mirjam Rachelorcid-logo
Universitätsklinik für Neurologie
Poorthuis, Michiel H F
de Borst, Gert J
Rundek, Tatjana
Kakkos, Stavros K
Chaturvedi, Seemant
Topakian, Raffi
Polak, Joseph F
Jickling, Glen C
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Circulation research
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1524-4571
Publisher
American Heart Association
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.122.320877
PubMed ID
35713008
Uncontrolled Keywords

atherosclerosis carot...

Description
BACKGROUND

IL-6 (interleukin-6) has important roles in atherosclerosis pathophysiology. To determine if anti-IL-6 therapy warrants evaluation as an adjuvant stroke prevention strategy in patients with carotid atherosclerosis, we tested whether circulating IL-6 levels predict carotid plaque severity, vulnerability, and progression in the prospective population-based CHS (Cardiovascular Health Study).

METHODS

Duplex carotid ultrasound was performed at baseline and 5 years. Baseline plaque severity was scored 0 to 5 based on North American Symptomatic Carotid Endarterectomy Trial grade of stenosis. Plaque vulnerability at baseline was the presence of markedly irregular, ulcerated, or echolucent plaques. Plaque progression at 5 years was a ≥1 point increase in stenosis severity. The relationship of baseline plasma IL-6 levels with plaque characteristics was modeled using multivariable linear (severity) or logistic (vulnerability and progression) regression. Risk factors of atherosclerosis were included as independent variables. Stepwise backward elimination was used with P>0.05 for variable removal. To assess model stability, we computed the E-value or minimum strength of association (odds ratio scale) that unmeasured confounders must have with log IL-6 and the outcome to suppress the association. We performed internal validation with 100 bootstrap samples.

RESULTS

There were 4334 participants with complete data (58.9% women, mean age: 72.7±5.1 years), including 1267 (29.2%) with vulnerable plaque and 1474 (34.0%) with plaque progression. Log IL-6 predicted plaque severity (β=0.09, P=1.3×10-3), vulnerability (OR, 1.21 [95% CI, 1.05-1.40]; P=7.4×10-3, E-value=1.71), and progression (OR, 1.44 [95% CI, 1.23-1.69], P=9.1×10-6, E-value 2.24). In participants with >50% predicted probability of progression, mean log IL-6 was 0.54 corresponding to 2.0 pg/mL. Dichotomizing IL-6 levels did not affect the performance of prediction models.

CONCLUSIONS

Circulating IL-6 predicts carotid plaque severity, vulnerability, and progression. The 2.0 pg/mL cutoff could facilitate the selection of individuals that would benefit from anti-IL-6 drugs for stroke prevention.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/88708
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Kamtchum_Tatuene__2022__Interleukin_6_predicts_carotid_plaque_severity.pdftextAdobe PDF1.4 MBpublisherpublished restricted
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