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on September 14, 2009

Circulation. 2009
Published online before print September 14, 2009, doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.109.853895
A more recent version of this article appeared on September 29, 2009
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Submitted on January 27, 2009
Accepted on July 14, 2009

Association of Leukocyte Telomere Length With Echocardiographic Left Ventricular Mass. The Framingham Heart Study

Ramachandran S. Vasan MD*, Serkalem Demissie PhD, Masayuki Kimura PhD, L. Adrienne Cupples PhD, Charles White MPH, Jeffrey P. Gardner PhD, Xiaogian Cao MS, Daniel Levy MD, Emelia J. Benjamin MD, ScM, and Abraham Aviv MD

From the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute's Framingham Heart Study (R.S.V., S.D., L.A.C., D.L., E.J.B.), Framingham, Mass; Sections of Preventive Medicine and Cardiology (R.S.V., E.J.B.), Evans Department of Medicine and Whitaker Cardiovascular Institute, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Mass; Department of Biostatistics (S.D., L.A.C., C.W.), Department of Epidemiology (E.J.B.), Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, Mass; The Center of Human Development and Aging (M.K., J.P.G., X.C., A.A.), University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark, NJ; and Center for Population Studies (D.L.), National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: vasan{at}bu.edu.

Background—Leukocyte telomere length (LTL) decreases over the adult life course owing to the cumulative burden of oxidative stress, inflammation, and exposure to vascular risk factors. Left ventricular (LV) mass is a biomarker of long-standing exposure to cardiovascular disease risk factors. We hypothesized that LTL is related inversely to LV mass.

Methods and Results—We related LTL (measured by Southern blot analysis) to echocardiographic LV mass and its components (LV diastolic dimension and LV wall thickness) in 850 Framingham Heart Study participants (mean age 58 years, 58% women) using multivariable linear regression with adjustment for age, sex, height, weight, systolic blood pressure, hypertension treatment, and smoking. Overall, multivariable-adjusted LTL was positively related to LV mass ({beta}-coefficient per SD increase 0.072; P=0.001), LV wall thickness ({beta}=0.053; P=0.01), and LV diastolic dimension ({beta}=0.035; P=0.09). We observed effect modification by hypertension status (P for interaction=0.02 for LV mass); LTL was more strongly associated with LV mass and LV wall thickness in individuals with hypertension ({beta}-coefficient per SD increment of 0.10 and 0.08, respectively; P<0.01 for both). Participants with hypertension who were in the top quartile of LV mass had LTL that was 250 base pairs longer than those in the lowest quartile (P for trend across quartiles=0.009).

Conclusions—In contrast to our expectation, in the present community-based sample, LTL was positively associated with LV mass and wall thickness, especially so in participants with hypertension. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that longer LTL may be a marker of propensity to LV hypertrophy.


Key words: telomere • echocardiography • hypertension • epidemiology • hypertrophy


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Clinical Summaries
Circulation 2009 120: 1165-1167. [Extract] [Full Text]