Aim: While circulating biomarkers are critical tools for cardiovascular adult care, their relevance in childhood is unknown.
Methods: We evaluated the behavior of plasma concentrations of clinically relevant cardiac biomarkers (NT-proBNP, hs-cTnI, sST2, Galectin-3) in 106 healthy children.
Results: Subjects were divided into age subgroups: 24 newborns (0-30 days), 26 infants (1-12 months), 30 children (1-12 years) and 26 adolescents (13-18 years). Healthy adults were used as control. NT-proBNP (newborns: 504.3 [211.07-942.7] ng/L, median [25-75 percentiles]; infants: 200.64 [76.88-306.73]; children: 97.27 [49.24-271.80]; adolescents: 24.35 [13.14-58.83]; p < 0.001) and hs-cTnI (newborns: 9.3 [3.3-93.8] ng/L; infants: 13.8 [4.82-72.52]; children: 11.45 [4.0-48.10]; adolescents: 2.6[2.07-3.90]; p < 0.001) were highest in the first month of life, showing a decline in the next years. sST2 and Galectin-3 showed no differences.
Conclusion: Changes in hs-cTnI and NT-proBNP suggest the design of age- and sex-based reference intervals that will have to be explored in a larger population.
Keywords: Galectin-3; NT-pro BNP; hs cardiac Troponin I; pediatric population; sST2.