INFLAMMATION: CORRELATES AND PROGNOSIS IN FRAMINGHAM
Project Number1R01HL064753-01
Contact PI/Project LeaderBENJAMIN, EMELIA J.
Awardee OrganizationBOSTON UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CAMPUS
Description
Abstract Text
DESCRIPTION (Verbatim from Applicant's Abstract): Increasingly, researchers
understand that inflammation is critical to the development of atherosclerosis
and the progression to cardiovascular (CVD) events. We hypothesize that a
pathophysiologic link between systemic inflammation and CVD events is through
endothelial injury and dysfunction. Endothelial dysfunction with subsequent
loss of the vasodilator, anti-thrombotic, and anti-inflammatory properties of
the vascular endothelium plays a dynamic role in the development of
atherosclerosis and the activation of plaques culminating in CVD events.
Most prior studies of inflammatory markers have been limited to small samples
of highly selected patients. The relation between the markers and
cardiovascular risk factors remains unclear and their relation with endothelial
dysfunction and subclinical disease remains largely unexplored. Most
importantly, prior studies have not demonstrated if inflammatory markers
predict incident CVD in the community. Completion of such a study will require
assessment of inflammatory markers in a large, well-characterized population.
We propose to assess inflammatory markers in about 3,800 men and women of the
Framingham Study. The markers will include inflammatory (C-reactgive protein,
fibrinogen, soluble intercellular adhesion molecule-1, endothelin-1, monocyte
chemotactic protein-1, tumor necrosis factor-alpha) and oxidative stress
markers (8-epi-PGF 2alpha, thromboxane B2). The specific aims of this proposal
are to: 1. Determine the relation between CVD risk factors and systemic markers
of vascular inflammation. 2. Analyze the relations between inflammatory
markers, endothelial dysfunction, and subclinical disease. 3. Relate markers of
inflammation to prevalent and incident CVD events adjusting for standard risk
factors. Our central hypothesis is that inflammatory markers are independent
risk factors for CVD events with endothelial dysfunction operating in the
causal pathway. The Framingham Study is uniquely suited for this proposal by
virtue of the single site population-based design, the availability of
extensive antecedent and contemporary risk factor data, and the availability of
long-term, longitudinal follow-up. The proposed study provides a unique
opportunity to assess the prognostic importance of inflammatory markers and is
likely to yield new information that will directly improve the prevention and
management of CVD.
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