Varying C-reactive protein levels in ethnic groups may affect statin eligibility and prediction of cardiovascular risk
Average C-reactive protein (CRP) values vary in diverse
populations - possibly impacting how doctors estimate cardiovascular risk and
determine statin treatment, according to a new study in Circulation: Cardiovascular
Genetics, a journal of the American Heart Association.
"CRP may be used at the discretion of the physician as
part of a global coronary risk assessment in adults without known cardiovascular
disease," according to consensus statements from the American Heart Association
and Centers for Disease Control. A CRP value above a cut-point of 3mg/L indicates
high risk.
In the recent Justification for the Use of Statins in
Primary Prevention: an Intervention Trial Evaluating Rosuvastatin (JUPITER), researchers
evaluated the efficacy of statins using a risk cut-point for CRP at values more
than 2mg/L. Based on JUPITER's findings, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
recently licensed the use of rosuvastatin to prevent cardiovascular disease in
men over 50 years and women over 60 years who have one other risk factor and CRP
greater than 2mg/L.
"The difference in average population CRP values in populations
of different ancestry are sufficiently large as to have bearing on clinical management
and statin eligibility based on single CRP cut-point values," said Tina Shah,
Ph.D., co- author of the study and a post-doctoral research fellow at University
College London.
Researchers conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis
of data on 221, 287 people from 89 published studies and discovered that CRP levels
differed by ethnicity, even after adjustments for age and body mass index. African-Americans
had the highest CRP levels with an average of 2.6 mg/L, followed by Hispanics
(2.51 mg/L), South Asians (2.34 mg/L) and Caucasians (2.03 mg/L). East Asians
had the lowest CRP levels of 1.01 mg/L.
The rank order remained the same when researchers calculated
the probability that people in each ethnic group would exceed the 2 mg/L CRP threshold
at any age. More than half of African-Americans and Hispanics would likely exceed
the 2 mg/L CRP threshold at 50 years, while less than half of East Asians would
surpass the threshold. Likewise, at 60 years, less than 40 percent of East Asians
and almost two-thirds of African-Americans and Hispanics would likely have a CRP
> 2mg/L.
A genetic analysis in the multi-ethnic Wandsworth Heart
and Stroke Study showed that a gene associated with CRP levels varied in frequency
by ethnicity. This study was a population-based survey in South London to estimate
the prevalence of major heart and stroke risk factors in people of different ethnic
backgrounds. An assessment of lifestyle factors showed that body mass index, systolic
blood pressure and smoking contributed to differences in CRP between groups, but
the majority of the difference in CRP was unexplained.
"There is ongoing debate over the ability of CRP to predict
the risk of heart disease over established cardiovascular risk factors, even in
individuals of European origin where there is the most evidence pertaining to
the CRP-coronary disease association," said Aroon D. Hingorani, Ph.D., co-author
of the study and professor of genetic epidemiology and British Heart Foundation
Senior Research Fellow at University College London.
"If clinicians still want to use CRP as part of heart
risk prediction, the results of the current study suggest they should bear ethnicity
in mind in interpreting a CRP value."
The absolute risk of heart disease for different ethnic
groups and individuals should be based on established risk factors using the Framingham
risk equation, she said.
Other co-authors are: Paul Newcombe, Ph.D.; Liam Smeeth,
Ph.D.; Juliet Addo, Ph.D.; Juan P. Casas, M.D., Ph.D.; John Whittaker, Ph.D.;
Michelle A. Miller, Ph.D.; Lorna Tinworth, Ph.D.; Steve Jeffery, Ph.D.; Pasquale
Strazzullo, M.D.; and Francesco P. Cappuccio, M.D.
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