Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The systemic inflammation response index (SIRI) and albumin-globulin ratio (AGR) reflect inflammatory and nutritional status relevant to cardiovascular health, yet their joint prognostic relevance in early-stage cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic (CKM) syndrome remains unclear. We evaluated the independent and joint associations of SIRI and AGR with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in CKM stages 0-3.</p>
METHODS: In this prospective cohort study, 284,012 UK Biobank participants with CKM stages 0-3 were followed until August 2025. Associations of SIRI and AGR with mortality were assessed using Cox proportional hazards models. Mediation analyses evaluated contributions of cardiometabolic factors. Non-linear dose-response relationships were examined using restricted cubic splines, and joint analyses were performed based on spline-derived cut-offs.</p>
RESULTS: Over a median follow-up of 16.48 years, 24,022 all-cause and 2712 cardiovascular deaths occurred. Higher SIRI was associated with increased mortality (HR 1.24 [95% CI 1.22-1.25] for all-cause; 1.23 [1.18-1.29] for cardiovascular), whereas higher AGR was inversely associated (HR 0.61 [0.58-0.64]; 0.64 [0.55-0.75]). BMI and eGFR mediated 11-18% of the AGR-mortality association, whereas SIRI risk was largely independent of conventional pathways. Joint analyses identified a high-risk phenotype (high SIRI/low AGR) with the greatest mortality risk. Cardiovascular associations were stronger among participants with favorable social determinants of health (p for interaction <0.05).</p>
CONCLUSION: In early CKM stages, SIRI and AGR were independently and jointly associated with long-term risks of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality. Incorporating SIRI and AGR into the CKM framework may improve early risk stratification and identification of high-risk inflammatory-nutritional phenotypes in preclinical stages.</p>