Prognostic impact of cachexia by multi‐assessment in older adults with heart failure: FRAGILE‐HF cohort study

Author:

Maekawa Emi1,Noda Takumi2ORCID,Maeda Daichi3,Yamashita Masashi2,Uchida Shota2,Hamazaki Nobuaki4,Nozaki Kohei4,Saito Hiroshi35,Saito Kazuya6,Ogasahara Yuki7,Konishi Masaaki8,Kitai Takeshi9,Iwata Kentaro10,Jujo Kentaro11,Wada Hiroshi12,Kasai Takatoshi313,Nagamatsu Hirofumi14,Ozawa Tetsuya15,Izawa Katsuya16,Yamamoto Shuhei17,Aizawa Naoki18,Yonezawa Ryusuke19,Oka Kazuhiro20,Ako Junya1,Momomura Shin‐ichi21,Kagiyama Nobuyuki222324,Matsue Yuya3,Kamiya Kentaro225ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine Kitasato University School of Medicine Sagamihara Japan

2. Department of Rehabilitation Sciences Kitasato University Graduate School of Medical Sciences Sagamihara Japan

3. Department of Cardiovascular Biology and Medicine Juntendo University Graduate School of Medicine Tokyo Japan

4. Department of Rehabilitation Kitasato University Hospital Sagamihara Japan

5. Department of Rehabilitation Kameda Medical Center Kamogawa Japan

6. Department of Rehabilitation The Sakakibara Heart Institute of Okayama Okayama Japan

7. Department of Nursing The Sakakibara Heart Institute of Okayama Okayama Japan

8. Division of Cardiology Yokohama City University Medical Center Yokohama Japan

9. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine National Cerebral and Cardiovascular Center Suita Japan

10. Department of Rehabilitation Kobe City Medical Center General Hospital Kobe Japan

11. Department of Cardiology Nishiarai Heart Center Hospital Tokyo Japan

12. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Saitama Medical Center Jichi Medical University Shimotsuke Japan

13. Department of Cardiovascular Respiratory Sleep Medicine Juntendo University Graduate School of Medicine Tokyo Japan

14. Department of Cardiology Tokai University School of Medicine Isehara Japan

15. Department of Rehabilitation Odawara Municipal Hospital Odawara Japan

16. Department of Rehabilitation Matsui Heart Clinic Saitama Japan

17. Department of Rehabilitation Shinshu University Hospital Matsumoto Japan

18. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Nephrology and Neurology University of the Ryukyus Nishihara Japan

19. Department of Rehabilitation Kitasato University Medical Center Kitamoto Japan

20. Department of Rehabilitation Saitama Citizens Medical Center Saitama Japan

21. Saitama Citizens Medical Center Saitama Japan

22. Department of Cardiovascular Biology and Medicine Juntendo University Faculty of Medicine Tokyo Japan

23. Department of Cardiology The Sakakibara Heart Institute of Okayama Okayama Japan

24. Department of Digital Health and Telemedicine R&D Juntendo University Tokyo Japan

25. Department of Rehabilitation, School of Allied Health Sciences Kitasato University Sagamihara Japan

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundCachexia substantially impacts the prognosis of patients with heart failure (HF); however, there is no standard method for cachexia diagnosis. This study aimed to investigate the association of Evans's criteria, consisting of multiple assessments, with the prognosis of HF in older adults.MethodsThis study is a secondary analysis of the data from the FRAGILE‐HF study, a prospective multicentre cohort study that enrolled consecutive hospitalized patients aged ≥65 years with HF. Patients were divided into two groups: the cachexia and non‐cachexia groups. Cachexia was defined according to Evans's criteria by assessing weight loss, muscle weakness, fatigue, anorexia, a decreased fat‐free mass index and an abnormal biochemical profile. The primary outcome was all‐cause mortality, as assessed in the survival analysis.ResultsCachexia was present in 35.5% of the 1306 enrolled patients (median age [inter‐quartile range], 81 [74–86] years; 57.0% male); 59.6%, 73.2%, 15.6%, 71.0%, 44.9% and 64.6% had weight loss, decreased muscle strength, a low fat‐free mass index, abnormal biochemistry, anorexia and fatigue, respectively. All‐cause mortality occurred in 270 patients (21.0%) over 2 years. The cachexia group (hazard ratio [HR], 1.494; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.173–1.903; P = 0.001) had a higher mortality risk than the non‐cachexia group after adjusting for the severity of HF. Cardiovascular and non‐cardiovascular deaths occurred in 148 (11.3%) and 122 patients (9.3%), respectively. The adjusted HRs for cachexia in cardiovascular mortality and non‐cardiovascular mortality were 1.456 (95% CI, 1.048–2.023; P = 0.025) and 1.561 (95% CI, 1.086–2.243; P = 0.017), respectively. Among the cachexia diagnostic criteria, decreased muscle strength (HR, 1.514; 95% CI, 1.095–2.093; P = 0.012) and low fat‐free mass index (HR, 1.424; 95% CI, 1.052–1.926; P = 0.022) were significantly associated with high all‐cause mortality, but there was no significant association between weight loss alone (HR, 1.147; 95% CI, 0.895–1.471; P = 0.277) and all‐cause mortality.ConclusionsCachexia evaluated by multi‐assessment was present in one third of older adults with HF and was associated with a worse prognosis. A multimodal assessment of cachexia may be helpful for risk stratification in older patients with HF.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology (medical),Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

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