Association of Potassium Level at Discharge with Long-Term Mortality in Hospitalized Patients with Heart Failure

Author:

Miura YusukeORCID,Higuchi SatoshiORCID,Kohno Takashi,Shiraishi YasuyukiORCID,Kitamura Mitsunobu,Nagatomo YujiORCID,Takei Makoto,Nakano Shintaro,Goda AyumiORCID,Soejima Kyoko,Kohsaka ShunORCID,Yoshikawa Tsutomu

Abstract

Dyskalemia (hypokalemia and hyperkalemia) is a common comorbidity of heart failure (HF). Although dyskalemia is associated with poor prognosis, different prognostic impacts of hypo- and hyperkalemia remain vastly unclear. This study investigated the association of dyskalemia with prognosis in HF patients, especially the mode of death and left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF). The multicenter study included 3398 patients hospitalized for HF. Patients were divided into three groups based on serum potassium levels at discharge: hypokalemia (<3.5 mEq/L; n = 115 (3.4%)), normokalemia (3.5–5.0 mEq/L; n = 2960 (87.1%)), and hyperkalemia (≥5.0 mEq/L; n = 323 (9.5%)). Two-year all-cause, cardiac, and non-cardiac mortality was evaluated. Association of serum potassium with two-year mortality demonstrated a U-shaped curve, with a worse prognosis for patients with hypokalemia. All-cause mortality at two-years did not differ among the three groups. Hypokalemia was associated with 2-year cardiac death (adjusted hazard ratio (HR), 2.60; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.20–5.64) in HF with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF; LVEF < 40%), but not in non-HFrEF. Regardless of LVEF, hyperkalemia was not independently associated with any mortality. Hypokalemia was independently associated with cardiac death, particularly in HFrEF patients. Such an association was not observed in hyperkalemia regardless of LVEF.

Funder

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research

Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists

Grant-in-Aid for Clinical Research from the Japanese Circulation Society

Grant-in-Aid from the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare

Health Labour Science Research Grant

Sakakibara Clinical Research Grant for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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