Clinical Perspective
What Is New?
Lower levels of
NT-proBNP (N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide) and
interleukin-6 in middle-aged adults were independently associated
with better physical capability (a key component of healthy aging) up
to 9 years later.
Such
associations were meaningfully stronger than those observed for
conventional risk markers including lipids, blood pressure, and
glycemia and were not explained by the onset of cardiovascular and
kidney disease or diabetes mellitus.
What Are the
Clinical Implications?
Elevated
NT-proBNP and interleukin-6 in midlife could help identify (and
thereby target) individuals set to have poor physical capability as
they age.
Such findings
may relate in part to such biomarkers capturing early end-organ
damage, or cumulative stressor pathways that lead to physical
decline.
Future trials
targeting improvements in physical capability should include
middle-aged as well as older adults and use measurements of
cardio-renal biomarkers as intermediate outcomes.
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