The impact of gender and frailty on the outcome of older patients with functional mitral regurgitation

Author:

Bruno Raphael Romano1ORCID,Uzel Robert2,Spieker Maximilian1,Datz Christian3,Oehler Daniel1,Bönner Florian1,Kelm Malte14,Hoppichler Friedrich2,Jung Christian1,Wernly Bernhard35ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiology, Pulmonology and Vascular Medicine, Faculty of Medicine Heinrich‐Heine‐University Duesseldorf Duesseldorf Germany

2. Department of Internal Medicine Saint John of God Hospital, Teaching Hospital of the Paracelsus Medical Private University Salzburg Austria

3. Department of Internal Medicine Teaching Hospital of the Paracelsus Medical University Salzburg, General Hospital Oberndorf Oberndorf Austria

4. CARID Cardiovascular Research Institute Duesseldorf Düsseldorf Germany

5. Institute of General Practice, Family Medicine and Preventive Medicine Paracelsus Medical University Salzburg Austria

Abstract

AbstractAimsFunctional mitral regurgitation (MR) is the second most common valvular heart disease worldwide and is increasing with age. The present study investigates the gender distribution and 1 year prognosis of older patients (≥65 years) with pharmacologically treated MR in a real‐world population with moderate to severe functional MR.Methods and resultsThis a single‐centre retrospective observational cohort study and included 243 medically treated patients with moderate to severe MR from 2014 to 2020. Echocardiography was performed at baseline. The combined endpoint was hospitalization due to heart failure and all‐cause death. There were more female than male patients (42% vs. 58%) without differences regarding age (81 ± 7 years in males vs. 82 ± 8 years in females, P = 0.24). Heart failure symptoms were distributed equally in both groups. Almost half of the patients evidenced a high EuroSCORE II (41%/42%). Atrial fibrillation was frequent, affecting 65% male and 64% female patients (P = 0.89). There were no differences regarding medical treatment. In both genders, two‐thirds of the patients displayed MR grade II° (71% (72), and 69% (97)), and one‐third showed MR grade III° (29% (30) vs. 31% (44), respectively, P = 0.76). Although males had larger left ventricular end‐diastolic diameter, lower ejection fraction (39% (16) vs. 48% (14), P < 0.001), and more dilated left atria. After 1 year, genders did not differ regarding the combined primary endpoint of hospitalization due to heart failure and all‐cause mortality (32% (33) for males vs. 29% (41) for females, P = 0.61). One‐year mortality was low and equal in both cohorts (11% in males and 9% in females, P = 0.69). In univariate Cox regression proportion hazard model, being female was not associated with the primary endpoint (hazard ratio 0.87 (95% confidence interval 0.55 to 1.37), P = 0.54). Multivariable adjustment for EuroSCORE II and frailty did not result in a significant change regarding the impact of the female gender.ConclusionsDespite better left ventricular systolic function, mortality in medically treated older female patients suffering from functional mitral regurgitation is not lower than in males. In this real‐world cohort, frailty was a stronger predictor of clinical outcome than gender.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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