Patients with heart failure and cardiac fibrosis
This scientific roadmap highlights the complexity of cardiac fibrosis in heart failure and calls for more precise diagnostic and therapeutic approaches.
Fibrosis is a pivotal player in heart failure development and progression. Measurements of (markers of) fibrosis in tissue and blood may help to diagnose and risk stratify patients with heart failure, and its treatment may be effective in preventing heart failure and its progression. A lack of pathophysiological insights and uniform definitions has hampered the research in fibrosis and heart failure. The Translational Research Committee of the Heart Failure Association discussed several aspects of fibrosis in their workshop. Early insidious perturbations such as subclinical hypertension or inflammation may trigger first fibrotic events, while more dramatic triggers such as myocardial infarction and myocarditis give rise to full blown scar formation and ongoing fibrosis in diseased hearts. Aging itself is also associated with a cardiac phenotype that includes fibrosis. Fibrosis is an extremely heterogeneous phenomenon, as several stages of the fibrotic process exist, each with different fibrosis subtypes and a different composition of various cells and proteins - resulting in a very complex pathophysiology. As a result, detection of fibrosis, e.g. using current cardiac imaging modalities or plasma biomarkers, will detect only specific subforms of fibrosis, but cannot capture all aspects of the complex fibrotic process. Furthermore, several anti-fibrotic therapies are under investigation, but such therapies generally target aspecific aspects of the fibrotic process and suffer from a lack of precision. This review discusses the mechanisms and the caveats and proposes a roadmap for future research.
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Rudolf A. de Boer
Heart Failure & Transplant
Gilles W. De Keulenaer
Heart Failure & Transplant
Johann Bauersachs
Heart Failure & Transplant
European Journal of Heart Failure
Imperial College London
KU Leuven
King's College London
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Boer et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d72afccd480cb7e5f50ef6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/ejhf.1406
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