Prognostic Role of Sonographic Decongestion in Patients with Acute Heart Failure with Reduced and Preserved Ejection Fraction: A Multicentre Study

Author:

Pugliese Nicola R.ORCID,Mazzola Matteo,Bandini Giulia,Barbieri Greta,Spinelli StefanoORCID,De Biase Nicolò,Masi StefanoORCID,Moggi-Pignone Alberto,Ghiadoni Lorenzo,Taddei Stefano,Sicari Rosa,Pang Peter S.,De Carlo MarcoORCID,Gargani LunaORCID

Abstract

Background: We investigated the role of the dynamic changes of pulmonary congestion, as assessed by sonographic B-lines, as a tool to stratify prognosis in patients admitted for acute heart failure with reduced and preserved ejection fraction (HFrEF, HFpEF). Methods: In this multicenter, prospective study, lung ultrasound was performed at admission and before discharge by trained investigators, blinded to clinical findings. Results: We enrolled 208 consecutive patients (mean age 76 [95% confidence interval, 70–84] years), 125 with HFrEF, 83 with HFpEF (mean ejection fraction 32% and 57%, respectively). The primary composite endpoint of cardiovascular death or HF re-hospitalization occurred in 18% of patients within 6 months. In the overall population, independent predictors of the occurrence of the primary endpoint were the number of B-lines at discharge, NT-proBNP levels, moderate-to-severe mitral regurgitation, and inferior vena cava diameter on admission. B-lines at discharge were the only independent predictor in both HFrEF and HFpEF subgroups. A cut-off of B-lines > 15 at discharge displayed the highest accuracy in predicting the primary endpoint (AUC = 0.80, p < 0.0001). Halving B-lines during hospitalization further improved event classification (continuous net reclassification improvement = 22.8%, p = 0.04). Conclusions: The presence of residual subclinical sonographic pulmonary congestion at discharge predicts 6-month clinical outcomes across the whole spectrum of acute HF patients, independent of conventional biohumoral and echocardiographic parameters. Achieving effective pulmonary decongestion during hospitalization is associated with better outcomes.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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