Irish Daily Mail

Blood test that can spot patients with heart failure risk

- By Kate Pickles

A SIMPLE blood test could help identify patients who are at the most immediate risk of dying from heart failure, a study suggests.

Those with highest levels of a specific protein were 50% more likely to die from a heart complicati­on over the three-year study period, compared to those with lower levels.

Experts said the findings suggest measuring levels of neuropepti­de Y (NPY) could help predict how heart failure is likely to progress. This could then be used to identify those most at risk and tailor treatments to slow the deadly disease, which occurs when the heart cannot pump blood around the body as well as it should.

Oxford University researcher­s used study data from more than 800 adults at different stages of heart failure. The results were published in the European Journal of Heart Failure. The subjects were measured for levels of natriureti­c peptide (BNP), a hormone currently used to diagnose heart failure, alongside NPY. Nerves in the heart release NPY in response to extreme stress, which can trigger dangerous heart rhythms. This can cause the smallest blood vessels in the heart muscle to close up, making the heart work harder and causing blood vessels going to the heart to contract.

Scientists found around a third of the group had high levels of NPY and were 50 per cent more likely to die from a heart complicati­on during the three-year follow-up period. They suggest that measuring NPY alongside BNP could be used to help diagnose those in the most immediate danger. This would allow doctors to decide who could benefit from treatments such as an implantabl­e cardiovert­er-defibrilla­tor (ICD) which detects and stops irregular heartbeats, called arrhythmia­s.

Neil Herring, professor of cardiovasc­ular medicine at the University of Oxford, said the blood tests could be introduced within five years.

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