Heart failure is a frequent and life-threatening syndrome which is not only the result of myocardial injury or hemodynamic overload as commonly perceived, but appears to be the result of an interplay among genetic, neurohormonal, inflammatory, and biochemical factors, collectively referred to as biomarkers. Biomarkers can become risk factors in case their therapeutic modification results in an improvement of clinical outcomes. Among those markers identified in patients with heart failure, a number appears to have direct clinical relevance in aiding diagnosis, risk stratification, monitoring therapy, and treating to targets in order to improve clinical outcomes. These include brain natriuretic peptides (e.g., BNP, NT-proBNP), inflammatory ma...