By Ambarish Pandey, M.D.
Assistant Professor of Internal
Medicine
At
this year’s AHA Scientific Sessions, we presented findings from our study evaluating
the contributions of left ventricular hypertrophy and subclinical myocardial
injury toward risk of heart failure among African-Americans in the Jackson
Heart Study. Heart failure risk factors and clinical heart failure are more
common among African-Americans than other race/ethnic groups.
Our
study found that in African-Americans, both left ventricular hypertrophy and
subclinical myocardial injury were independently associated with an increased
risk of heart failure. Furthermore, there was a synergistic interaction between
left ventricular mass and burden of subclinical myocardial injury for the risk
of heart failure such that the individuals with both left ventricular
hypertrophy and myocardial injury had a very high risk of heart failure.
The malignant phenotype of
left ventricular hypertrophy with coexisting subclinical myocardial injury was
present in 3 percent of the study participants at baseline, and up to one-third
of participants with this phenotype developed heart failure over 10 years
follow-up. Our study findings underscore the importance of screening strategies
to identify this malignant phenotype in targeting of heart failure prevention
efforts to the highest-risk African-Americans who might benefit from aggressive
preventive interventions.