Affiliation:
1. Department of Medical Sciences Uppsala University Uppsala Sweden
2. School of Medical Science, Faculty of Medicine and Health Örebro University Örebro Sweden
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundEarly identification of individuals at risk of developing heart failure (HF) may improve poor prognosis. A dominant sympathetic activity is common in HF and associated with worse outcomes; however, less is known about the autonomic balance before HF.HypothesisA low frequency/high frequency (L‐F/H‐F) ratio, index of heart rate variability, and marker of the autonomic balance predict the development of HF and may improve the performance of the HF prediction model when added to traditional cardiovascular (CV) risk factors.MethodsIndividuals in the PIVUS (Prospective Investigation of the Vasculature in Uppsala Seniors) study (n = 1016, all aged 70 years) were included. Exclusion criteria were prevalent HF, electrocardiographic QRS duration ≥130 millisecond, major arrhythmias, or conduction blocks at baseline. The association between the L‐F/H‐F ratio and incident HF was assessed using Cox proportional hazard analysis. The C‐statistic evaluated whether adding the L‐F/H‐F‐ratio to traditional CV risk factors improved the discrimination of incident HF.ResultsHF developed in 107/836 study participants during 15 years of follow‐up. A nonlinear, inverse association between the L‐F/H‐F ratio and incident HF was mainly driven by an L‐F/H‐F ratio of <30. The association curve was flat for higher values (hazard ratio, HR for the total curve = 0.78 [95% confidence interval, CI: 0.69−0.88, p < .001]; HR = 2 for L‐F/H‐F ratio = 10). The traditional prediction model improved by 3.3% (p < .03) when the L‐F/H‐F ratio was added.ConclusionsAn L‐F/H‐F ratio of <30 was related to incident HF and improved HF prediction when added to traditional CV risk factors.