Conference Coverage

AHA: HFpEF, HFrEF cause similar acute hospitalization rates


 

AT THE AHA SCIENTIFIC SESSIONS

References

ORLANDO – The number of Americans hospitalized for acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) with preserved ejection fraction during 2003-2012 nearly equaled the number hospitalized with ADHF with reduced ejection fraction, in an analysis of more than 5 million hospitalized heart failure patients tracked in a national-sample database.

But the profile of patients hospitalized with ADHF with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) differed from patients hospitalized with acute heart failure and reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), with a substantially higher percentage of women and patients aged 75 years or older, Dr. Parag Goyal said at the American Heart Association scientific sessions.

Dr. Parag Goyal Mitchel L. Zoler/Frontline Medical News

Dr. Parag Goyal

The analysis also showed the strongest correlate for in-hospital mortality among HFpEF patients hospitalized with acute decompensation was a pulmonary circulation disorder, such as pulmonary hypertension, which nearly doubled the rate of in-hospital death among HFpEF patients. Other strong correlates of mortality during hospitalization were liver disease, which was linked with about a 50% boost in hospitalized mortality; and chronic renal failure, which was tied to a roughly one-third higher mortality, said Dr. Goyal, a cardiologist at New York–Presbyterian Hospital.

His study used data collected by the Nationwide Inpatient Sample, which included data on more than 388 million hospitalized U.S. patients during 2003-2012, including 5,046,879 hospitalized with acute heart failure. This total included 2,329,391 patients (46%) diagnosed with HFpEF and 2,717,488 patients (54%) diagnosed with HFrEF.

The HFpEF patients’ average age was 76 years, with 60% at least 75 years old, while the HFrEF patients’ average age was 72 years, with 49% age 75 years or older. Nearly two-thirds of the HFpEF patients were women, compared with 42% in the HFrEF group. The HFrEF patients also had a substantially higher prevalence of coronary artery disease, 59%, compared with 41% in the HFpEF group. The prevalence of several comorbidities – including diabetes, hypertension, and chronic renal failure – were each roughly similar in both subgroups, but the obesity rate of 19% in the HFpEF patients substantially exceeded the 12% rate in HFrEF patients.

In-hospital mortality ran 4.3% in the HFpEF patients and 5.1% in the HFrEF patients, a 13% relative-risk reduction that was statistically significant. But average length of stay was similar between the two groups, about 7 days with either type of heart failure.

Dr. Goyal and his associates also examined time trends during 2003-2012. During this period, the percentage of patients with HFpEF aged 75 years or older rose from 57% to 60%. Even more notably, the percentage of men with HFpEF rose from 31% in 2003 to 37% in 2012. Furthermore, the reduced in-hospital mortality during the period was largely driven by mortality reductions among HFpEF patients aged 65 years or older. A multivariate analysis for significant correlates of in-hospital mortality identified age 75 years or older, male sex, and white race in both the HFpEF subgroup and in those with HFrEF. Older age had the highest impact, linked with about a 60% relatively higher mortality rate in patients with either type of heart failure.

The multivariate analysis also identified three comorbidities linked with in-hospital mortality. A pulmonary circulation disorder was associated with a 90% higher mortality rate among HFpEF patients and a 79% higher rate among those with HFrEF. Liver disease and chronic renal disease linked with smaller mortality increases for both heart failure types. The presence of treatable comorbidities, including hypertension, diabetes, and coronary artery disease, linked with significantly lower in-hospital mortality rates. Dr. Goyal speculated that the reduced mortality resulted from successful treatment of these conditions.

mzoler@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @mitchelzoler

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