miR-30d Levels Predict Re-Hospitalization in Patients with Acute Cardiogenic Pulmonary Edema: A Preliminary Study
Giordano Bianchi, Barbara Vizio, Ornella Bosco, Martina Schiavello, Paolo Cagna Vallino, Francesca Rumbolo, Fulvio Morello, Giulio Mengozzi, Giuseppe Montrucchio, Enrico Lupia, Emanuele Pivetta

TL;DR
This study shows that higher levels of miR-30d in patients with acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema predict a higher risk of re-hospitalization within 3 months and 1 year.
Contribution
The study identifies miR-30d as a novel biomarker for predicting re-hospitalization in ACPE patients.
Findings
miR-30d levels were significantly higher in ACPE patients compared to controls.
Elevated miR-30d levels predicted re-hospitalization at 3 months and 1 year after discharge.
miR-30d outperformed other biomarkers in predicting re-hospitalization risk.
Abstract
Acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema (ACPE) is a common and serious manifestation of heart failure (HF), representing 10–20% of all acute HF admissions. It is associated with elevated in-hospital mortality and high rates of re-hospitalization. MicroRs, like miR-30d, are of particular interest in heart failure due to their regulatory role in gene expression and potential as biomarkers for diagnosing and predicting patient outcomes, especially in high-risk cases such as ACPE. We conducted a cohort study on patients diagnosed with ACPE in the Emergency Department (ED). The circulating levels of miR-30d were analyzed at the time of hospital admission and at one-month follow-up along with other biomarkers. We enrolled 24 ACPE patients and 10 control subjects. Median age was 80.8 years (interquartile range, IQR, 8.2) in ACPE cases, and 78.5 years (IQR 9.8) in controls with a male/female ratio of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicroRNA in disease regulation · Extracellular vesicles in disease · Pulmonary Hypertension Research and Treatments
