Elevated BNP Levels: Causes, Meaning, and Next Steps

Elevated BNP can indicate heart failure, pulmonary embolism, kidney disease, and more. Learn what causes high BNP and how to interpret your results.

April 23, 2026

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. An elevated BNP result requires interpretation by a qualified healthcare provider in the context of symptoms, medical history, and other clinical findings. Multiple conditions and medications affect BNP levels.

Author
Superpower Science Team
Reviewed by
Julija Rabcuka
PhD Candidate at Oxford University
Creative
Jarvis Wang

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before making changes to your health routine or interpreting laboratory results.


An elevated BNP result is among the more clinically consequential numbers in a lab report. It signals that the heart has been under mechanical stress, but it does not specify why, for how long, or how seriously to take it. Clinical interpretation depends on which conditions elevate BNP, what other factors shift the number up or down independent of cardiac pathology, and what the clinical picture looks like alongside the number — evaluation is done by a provider, not by the patient alone.

Key Takeaways

  • What elevated BNP reflects: Increased ventricular wall stress from elevated filling pressures, volume overload, or increased afterload — a compensatory signal, not a disease label.
  • Most common cause: Heart failure (both HFrEF and HFpEF), though multiple non-cardiac conditions also cause elevation.
  • Key threshold context: BNP above 400 pg/mL in acute dyspnea is associated with higher probability of heart failure. Age-stratified NT-proBNP thresholds (450/900/1,800 pg/mL for under 50/50-75/over 75) are used for ruling in acute heart failure in clinical evaluation.
  • Important confounders: Obesity lowers values; kidney disease raises NT-proBNP; sacubitril/valsartan (Entresto) raises BNP while lowering NT-proBNP; age and female sex raise values independent of cardiac pathology.
  • Prognostic meaning: Higher levels correlate with worse outcomes in heart failure; declining levels during treatment reflect hemodynamic improvement.
  • ICD-10 context: R79.89 (Other specified abnormal findings of blood chemistry) is the code used for elevated BNP as an isolated finding; underlying diagnosis codes apply when a specific condition is established.

What Elevated BNP Actually Represents

BNP (B-type natriuretic peptide) is not elevated because the heart is failing in a final sense — it is elevated because the heart is responding to increased mechanical stress. Ventricular cardiomyocytes synthesize and release BNP when they detect elevated filling pressures, volume overload, or increased afterload. The elevated circulating BNP that results is both a compensatory mechanism and a measurable marker of the degree of that mechanical burden. Goetze and colleagues, in a 2020 review in Nature Reviews Cardiology, described the pathophysiological meaning of natriuretic peptide elevation as a signal of ventricular wall stress, volume overload, and ischemia — and explained why distinguishing these drivers matters for interpretation. Kuwahara, in a 2021 review in Pharmacology and Therapeutics, detailed the diagnostic and therapeutic implications of elevated natriuretic peptide levels, including how persistently elevated values despite therapy signal residual hemodynamic burden.

The key interpretive principle, emphasized in the 2021 ESC Guidelines published by McDonagh and colleagues in the European Heart Journal, is that BNP and NT-proBNP are most useful when integrated with clinical assessment, not interpreted in isolation. A number above a threshold means something happened — it does not specify what or how serious.

Cardiac Causes of Elevated BNP

Heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF)

The most common and most reliably associated cause of significantly elevated BNP is heart failure with reduced ejection fraction. When systolic function is impaired, elevated ventricular end-diastolic pressure and volume produce sustained mechanical stretch of the ventricular wall, driving continuous BNP secretion. Values typically exceed 400 pg/mL in clinically significant presentations, often substantially. The 2021 ESC Guidelines, by McDonagh and colleagues, establish BNP and NT-proBNP as the primary initial biomarkers for suspected heart failure, with BNP below 35 pg/mL (non-acute) or below 100 pg/mL (acute) associated with a very low probability of heart failure as the cause of dyspnea at the time of measurement.

Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF)

BNP elevation also characterizes heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, though values tend to be more moderate than in HFrEF. HFpEF involves diastolic dysfunction, impaired ventricular relaxation, and elevated filling pressures that produce wall stress even when systolic contraction appears intact. Ammar and colleagues, in a 2025 systematic review and meta-analysis published in Heart Failure Reviews, showed that BNP and NT-proBNP predict adverse outcomes in HFpEF specifically, confirming the marker's diagnostic and prognostic utility across heart failure subtypes. The interpretation challenge in HFpEF is that obesity — a major comorbidity in this population — suppresses BNP levels, potentially masking the severity of cardiac stress.

Ischemia and acute coronary syndromes

Myocardial ischemia and infarction cause BNP elevation through the ventricular wall stress created by regional dysfunction and subsequent remodeling. Souza and colleagues, in a 2020 study in Arquivos Brasileiros de Cardiologia, showed NT-proBNP elevation has prognostic value equal to or greater than Killip classification in acute coronary syndromes, establishing its role in risk stratification beyond heart failure diagnosis. Gaggin and Januzzi, in a 2014 Clinical Laboratory Medicine review, provided a comprehensive overview of natriuretic peptides in heart failure and ACS, useful for the dual clinical audience of physicians and informed patients.

Valvular disease and structural cardiac abnormalities

Significant valvular disease — including aortic stenosis, mitral regurgitation, and tricuspid regurgitation — generates ventricular pressure or volume overload that elevates BNP. Atrial fibrillation, even without structural disease, raises natriuretic peptide levels through atrial stretch and resultant ventricular filling changes. Left ventricular hypertrophy increases wall mass and baseline wall stress, producing mildly to moderately elevated BNP in the absence of overt heart failure. These cardiac structural causes represent a significant proportion of mildly elevated BNP findings in asymptomatic screening contexts.

Non-Cardiac Causes of Elevated BNP

A clinically important proportion of elevated BNP results in acute and chronic settings reflect non-cardiac pathology. Misattributing a non-cardiac elevation to heart failure leads to inappropriate workup and potential overtreatment. Maeder and colleagues, in their 2008 practical review, systematically addressed BNP elevation in non-cardiac contexts and outlined the differential diagnostic framework.

Pulmonary embolism and right ventricular strain

Acute pulmonary embolism causes right ventricular pressure overload, producing right-sided wall stretch that elevates BNP independent of left heart function. Kucher, in a 2006 review in Seminars in Thrombosis and Hemostasis, showed that elevated BNP and NT-proBNP identify right-ventricular dysfunction in acute PE and predict adverse outcomes. Mikulewicz and Lewczuk, in a 2008 companion paper in Cardiology Journal, further characterized natriuretic peptides as risk-stratification tools in acute pulmonary embolism. In acute dyspnea presentations where both heart failure and PE are in the differential, the presence of elevated BNP alongside troponin and clinical signs should prompt evaluation for both conditions.

Chronic kidney disease

NT-proBNP, cleared primarily by renal filtration, accumulates in circulation when kidney function is impaired — elevating values independent of cardiac status. Neuen and colleagues, in a 2025 JACC Heart Failure paper, demonstrated how kidney function modulates natriuretic peptide concentrations and clinical outcomes in HFpEF, emphasizing the importance of interpreting BNP results alongside eGFR in patients with CKD. The practical implication is that an elevated NT-proBNP in a patient with an eGFR below 60 requires renal context before attributing elevation to cardiac causes. Volpe and colleagues, in a 2019 review in the International Journal of Cardiology, covered natriuretic peptides in heart failure management, including the challenge of interpreting elevated values in comorbid CKD.

Sepsis and critical illness

BNP is elevated in sepsis through cytokine-mediated cardiac stress — systemic inflammatory mediators induce myocardial depression and impair ventricular function even in the absence of primary cardiac disease. Khoury and colleagues, in a 2017 Journal of Critical Care paper, demonstrated that BNP elevation in non-cardiac sepsis carries long-term prognostic significance, establishing its relevance even when cardiac disease is not the primary diagnosis. The prognostic meaning of BNP elevation in sepsis differs mechanistically from its meaning in heart failure, but the marker's elevation in this context is real and clinically informative.

Confounders That Affect BNP Interpretation

Age and sex

BNP and NT-proBNP rise with age and are higher in women than men across all age groups, even without cardiac disease. Wang and colleagues, in a 2002 American Journal of Cardiology study, documented age and sex effects on plasma natriuretic peptide levels in healthy adults, establishing that what constitutes "elevated" is population-dependent. A mildly elevated BNP in an 80-year-old woman has a different prior probability of cardiac disease than the same value in a 40-year-old man. The age-stratified NT-proBNP thresholds from the ICON program directly incorporate this reality.

Obesity

Adipose tissue expresses high concentrations of NPR-C clearance receptors, which actively clear natriuretic peptides from circulation. The result is lower BNP and NT-proBNP levels in individuals with elevated BMI — an inverse relationship independent of cardiac status. Wang and colleagues, in the 2004 Circulation study, documented this inverse BMI-BNP relationship in detail. Khan and colleagues confirmed in 2011 that obesity and insulin resistance are independently associated with lower natriuretic peptide concentrations. In the context of elevated BNP, this means that an "elevated" value in a patient with severe obesity may represent substantially more cardiac stress than the same elevation in a lean patient — the effective threshold is lower in that population.

Sacubitril/valsartan (Entresto)

Sacubitril inhibits neprilysin, the primary enzyme responsible for degrading BNP. This produces a paradoxical rise in circulating BNP even as cardiac function improves — a direct analytical artifact of the drug's mechanism. NT-proBNP, not degraded by neprilysin, falls as expected with improving cardiac status. Myhre and colleagues, in the 2019 PARADIGM-HF biomarker analysis, demonstrated this divergent behavior between BNP and NT-proBNP during sacubitril/valsartan treatment. McMurray and colleagues, in the PARADIGM-HF primary trial published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2014, demonstrated the mortality and hospitalization benefit of sacubitril/valsartan in HFrEF, meaning many current heart failure patients are on this combination. An elevated BNP in a patient on Entresto may reflect medication effect, not clinical deterioration — NT-proBNP should be used for monitoring in these patients.

The Prognostic Significance of Elevated BNP

Beyond its diagnostic role, BNP elevation carries independent prognostic information. Higher levels at presentation are associated with greater clinical severity and worse outcomes across multiple conditions. Latini and colleagues, in the Val-HeFT neurohormone analysis published in the European Heart Journal in 2004, showed plasma BNP and NT-proBNP outperform other neurohormones in predicting adverse heart failure outcomes, establishing the prognostic dimension of elevated levels that goes beyond diagnosis. Masson and colleagues, in the Val-HeFT head-to-head analysis published in Clinical Chemistry in 2006, confirmed that both BNP and NT-proBNP predict outcomes in chronic HF but differ in dynamic range and kinetics.

Castiglione and colleagues, in a 2022 review in Heart Failure Reviews, reviewed biomarkers for heart failure diagnosis and management, covering BNP and NT-proBNP alongside emerging markers — providing the contemporary framework for how elevated natriuretic peptides fit into a comprehensive cardiac biomarker strategy.

Importantly, declining BNP during treatment is associated with improved outcomes: serial measurements that show progressive reduction reflect improving hemodynamics and are incorporated into guideline-directed monitoring strategies. Bayes-Genis and colleagues, in the 2023 HFA-ESC clinical consensus, provided practical NT-proBNP-based algorithms for early heart failure diagnosis and monitoring, mapping specific value bands to clinical actions and follow-up intervals. The joint scientific statement by Tsutsui and colleagues from the HFA-ESC, HFSA, and Japanese HF Society, published in the European Journal of Heart Failure in 2023, consolidated international consensus on natriuretic peptide use in diagnosis and management — the most current multi-society guidance on the topic.

How Elevated BNP Testing Works Clinically

Which assay was used matters

Interpreting an elevated result requires knowing whether BNP or NT-proBNP was measured. The two assays measure different molecular forms of the same precursor, have different reference ranges, and behave differently in specific clinical scenarios — particularly in patients on sacubitril/valsartan. Weber and colleagues, in a 2006 comparative review, documented analytical and clinical differences between BNP and NT-proBNP in stable coronary artery disease patients. Panagopoulou and colleagues, in a 2013 review in Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry, reviewed NT-proBNP clinical interpretation across cardiac diseases, useful for understanding which assay reference intervals apply to a given result.

Serial testing for monitoring

In active heart failure management, BNP or NT-proBNP is often measured serially to monitor treatment response. The same assay should be used consistently across serial measurements — switching between BNP and NT-proBNP assays mid-course creates interpretive confusion because the two tests do not track identically. Volpe and colleagues, in their 2019 review, addressed the interpretation of persistently elevated values despite optimized therapy, noting that residual elevation above the target range is associated with ongoing risk even when clinical symptoms have improved.

Which Biomarkers Are Worth Testing Alongside Elevated BNP

Elevated BNP raises the question of what is driving the cardiac stress. Complementary biomarkers help answer it.

  • Troponin (I or T): Distinguishes wall stress from active myocardial injury. Troponin testing alongside BNP helps identify whether elevated BNP reflects chronic pressure overload (isolated BNP elevation) or acute ischemic injury (combined troponin and BNP elevation). Both patterns occur in acute presentations.
  • hs-CRP: Systemic inflammation contributes to cardiac remodeling and heart failure progression. An elevated hs-CRP alongside elevated BNP provides context about the inflammatory contribution to cardiovascular risk beyond hemodynamic stress alone.
  • Creatinine and eGFR: Renal function is the most important confounder for NT-proBNP interpretation. Testing creatinine alongside NT-proBNP allows estimation of how much of the elevation reflects impaired clearance versus true cardiac stress. See the cardiovascular health biomarker guide for the broader context of cardiac and renal markers together.
  • Glucose and HbA1c: Diabetes and insulin resistance are major drivers of cardiomyopathy and HFpEF. Understanding HbA1c and fasting glucose alongside elevated BNP provides context for the metabolic contribution to cardiac stress.

When to Take Elevated BNP Seriously

An isolated mildly elevated BNP in an asymptomatic older adult — particularly a woman over 65 — is common and may reflect age, sex, or subclinical cardiac remodeling rather than active heart failure. It warrants provider awareness and, often, follow-up, but rarely requires immediate escalation in the absence of symptoms. The scenario that warrants prompt evaluation is an elevated BNP in the context of symptoms: acute or progressive shortness of breath, leg swelling, orthopnea, or fatigue with exertion. When symptoms accompany an elevated result, particularly at levels associated with higher probability of heart failure, clinical evaluation including echocardiography is generally indicated.

Persistently elevated BNP during treatment — particularly when values are not declining in the expected direction during guideline-directed medical therapy — signals residual hemodynamic burden and may prompt therapy escalation. Bayes-Genis and colleagues' 2023 HFA-ESC consensus provides the current algorithm for how specific NT-proBNP bands map to clinical decision points.

The BNP biomarker page provides ordering context alongside the interpretive framework covered here. For anyone interested in a broader cardiac risk picture, the guide to biomarker testing covers how cardiac, inflammatory, and metabolic markers work together in a comprehensive baseline assessment.

IMPORTANT SAFETY INFORMATION

BNP (B-type natriuretic peptide) and NT-proBNP are diagnostic biomarkers used by healthcare providers to evaluate cardiac stress and heart failure. This article is provided for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment guidance.

An elevated BNP or NT-proBNP result does not establish a diagnosis of any condition. Multiple conditions and medications affect natriuretic peptide levels, including obesity, kidney disease, age, sex, atrial fibrillation, pulmonary embolism, sepsis, and sacubitril/valsartan. Result interpretation requires clinical context. Consult a qualified healthcare provider for evaluation and interpretation of any abnormal laboratory result.

The ICD-10 code and threshold values cited in this article are for informational and educational purposes only. Clinical coding and diagnostic thresholds are applied by qualified healthcare providers, not by patients acting on article content. Do not use this article to self-diagnose, self-manage, or delay seeking clinical evaluation for symptoms including shortness of breath, leg swelling, or chest discomfort.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. An elevated BNP result requires interpretation by a qualified healthcare provider in the context of symptoms, medical history, and other clinical findings. Multiple conditions and medications affect BNP levels.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does an elevated BNP mean?

Elevated BNP indicates that the heart has been experiencing increased wall stress or volume overload — the ventricular myocardium releases more BNP when it is working harder than normal. The most common cause is heart failure, but elevated BNP also appears in pulmonary embolism, right ventricular strain, chronic kidney disease, atrial fibrillation, sepsis, and other conditions. Mueller and colleagues, in the 2019 HFA-ESC practical guidance published in the European Journal of Heart Failure, systematically listed the cardiac and non-cardiac causes of natriuretic peptide elevation, providing a widely cited differential context for interpreting an elevated result.

What level of BNP indicates heart failure?

In acute dyspnea, a BNP above 400 pg/mL is associated with higher probability of heart failure as the underlying cause and typically prompts echocardiographic evaluation. Age-stratified NT-proBNP thresholds for ruling in acute heart failure in clinical evaluation are above 450 pg/mL for adults under 50, above 900 pg/mL for ages 50 to 75, and above 1,800 pg/mL for adults over 75. These thresholds, derived from the ICON and ICON-RELOADED studies, were validated by Januzzi and colleagues in a 2018 Journal of the American College of Cardiology paper, refining these age-stratified NT-proBNP cutpoints in a contemporary ED population. No threshold alone establishes a diagnosis — symptoms and clinical context are required.

Can elevated BNP be caused by something other than heart failure?

Yes. Pulmonary embolism, right ventricular strain, chronic kidney disease, atrial fibrillation, sepsis, severe anemia, and hyperthyroidism can all cause elevated BNP without primary ventricular dysfunction. Maeder and colleagues, in a 2008 review in the International Journal of Cardiology, provided a practical review of BNP use beyond the ED, covering cardiac and non-cardiac causes and their clinical interpretation. This is why an elevated result always requires clinical evaluation rather than self-interpretation.

What is the ICD-10 code for elevated brain natriuretic peptide?

The ICD-10-CM code for elevated BNP is R79.89 (Other specified abnormal findings of blood chemistry). Some clinical systems may use R77.8 (Other specified abnormalities of plasma proteins). The elevated BNP code is used when the finding itself is the clinical issue being documented, rather than the underlying condition it reflects. In practice, the underlying diagnosis — such as heart failure (I50.xx) — would typically be coded alongside or instead of the elevated biomarker code when a specific diagnosis has been established.

What does the prognostic meaning of elevated BNP look like?

Elevated BNP carries significant prognostic information in both heart failure and non-cardiac conditions. Latini and colleagues, in the Val-HeFT analysis published in the European Heart Journal in 2004, showed plasma BNP and NT-proBNP predicted adverse outcomes better than other neurohormones in chronic heart failure, with higher levels correlating with greater risk. Higher BNP also predicts outcomes in acute pulmonary embolism and acute coronary syndromes. The prognostic value means that declining levels during treatment generally reflect improving hemodynamics — making BNP a useful serial monitoring marker as well as a diagnostic one.

Why does sacubitril/valsartan raise BNP even when cardiac function is improving?

Sacubitril, the neprilysin inhibitor component of Entresto, blocks the enzyme responsible for degrading BNP. This causes BNP to accumulate in circulation even as the underlying cardiac function improves. NT-proBNP, which is not degraded by neprilysin, falls as expected during effective treatment. Myhre and colleagues, in a 2019 PARADIGM-HF biomarker analysis, demonstrated divergent BNP and NT-proBNP behavior during sacubitril/valsartan treatment, establishing why NT-proBNP should be used for monitoring in patients on Entresto. A rising BNP in a patient on Entresto is not necessarily a sign of worsening heart failure.

How does elevated BNP relate to obesity?

In patients with obesity, BNP levels are lower than expected for a given degree of cardiac stress because adipose tissue expresses natriuretic peptide clearance receptors (NPR-C) that remove BNP from circulation. This means that a BNP within the standard "normal" range in a patient with obesity and cardiac symptoms should not necessarily reassure. Wang and colleagues, in a 2004 Circulation paper, documented the inverse BMI-BNP relationship. When interpreting an elevated BNP in a patient with obesity, the effective threshold may be lower than population-derived reference intervals suggest.

When should an elevated BNP prompt urgent evaluation?

An elevated BNP accompanied by acute shortness of breath, leg swelling, orthopnea (difficulty lying flat), or signs of systemic congestion warrants prompt clinical evaluation — not necessarily emergency care, but timely provider assessment. The 2021 ESC Guidelines, published by McDonagh and colleagues, define when elevated BNP or NT-proBNP should prompt echocardiography and cardiac referral. An isolated mildly elevated BNP in an asymptomatic older adult is common and may reflect age, sex, or kidney function rather than active cardiac pathology — provider evaluation determines clinical significance.