New tests fall short in revealing health risks

New blood tests that doctors hoped would more accurately predict which patients are headed for a heart attack or stroke are no better than cholesterol levels, blood pressure and other conventional measurements, a study found.

Doctors in recent years had become excited over substances in the blood that appeared to be powerful new predictors of a heart attack. These substances included C-reactive protein, or CRP; homocysteine; and BNP, or B-type natriuretic peptide.

An increasing number of family doctors have been ordering expensive tests for these substances, and some patients have started requesting them.

But the new research, by scientists at the highly regarded Framingham Heart Study, found that tests of CRP, BNP, homocysteine and seven other substances are only a couple of percentage points better at predicting outcomes than the standard, commonsense risk factors that doctors have known for decades. The difference in accuracy was considered so small as to be negligible.

The study was published in today’s New England Journal of Medicine.

The Framingham researchers, who have been testing residents of the Boston suburb for several decades, used frozen blood samples taken from 3,209 healthy Framingham participants in the mid-1990s, then checked to see who had major heart complications or died over the following decade.

The best predictors were tests for BNP, CRP, homocysteine and renin in the blood and albumin in the urine. Patients with the highest levels of BNP and albumin were nearly twice as likely as those with lowest levels to suffer a heart attack, stroke or heart failure; those with the highest levels of CRP, BNP and the three other substances were four times as likely to die during the decade.

However, the standard risk factors – high blood pressure, high cholesterol, family history, advanced age, smoking, obesity, lack of exercise and diabetes – proved to be just as accurate when it came to predicting heart disease.

And the new blood tests, which are not covered by insurance companies, can run from $25 to more than $150.

“This really supports the value of focusing on risk factor reduction, not looking for a magic blood test,” said Dr. Richard Stein, director of preventive cardiology at Beth Israel Medical Center in New York. He predicted some insurance companies will soon start telling doctors to limit such tests, which are not covered by some insurers.