Readmissions, Death and Its Associated Predictors in Heart Failure With Preserved Versus Reduced Ejection Fraction

Author:

Tay Wan Ting1ORCID,Teng Tiew‐Hwa Katherine123ORCID,Simon Oliver4,Ouwerkerk Wouter15ORCID,Tromp Jasper126,Doughty Robert N.78,Richards A. Mark910ORCID,Hung Chung‐Lieh11ORCID,Qin Yan12,Aung Than12,Anand Inder13ORCID,Lam Carolyn S. P.126ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. National Heart Centre Singapore Singapore

2. Duke‐National University of Singapore Medical School Singapore

3. School of Population & Global Health University of Western Australia Perth Australia

4. Novartis (Singapore) Pte Ltd Singapore

5. Department of Dermatology University of Amsterdam Medical Centre Amsterdam the Netherlands

6. University Medical Centre Groningen, University of Groningen Department of Cardiology Groningen the Netherlands

7. Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences University of Auckland Auckland New Zealand

8. Auckland City Hospital Auckland New Zealand

9. National University Heart Centre Singapore

10. University of Otago Dunedin New Zealand

11. Mackay Memorial Hospital Taipei Taiwan

12. Department of Internal Medicine Singapore General Hospital Singapore

13. Veterans Affairs Medical Center University of Minnesota Minneapolis MN

Abstract

Background Data on rehospitalizations for heart failure (HF) in Asia are scarce. We sought to determine the burden and predictors of HF (first and recurrent) rehospitalizations and all‐cause mortality in patients with HF and preserved versus reduced ejection fraction (preserved EF, ≥50%; reduced EF, <40%), in the multinational ASIAN‐HF (Asian Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure) registry. Methods and Results Patients with symptomatic (stage C) chronic HF were followed up for death and recurrent HF hospitalizations for 1 year. Predictors of HF hospitalizations or all‐cause mortality were examined with Cox regression for time to first event and other methods for recurrent events analyses. Among 1666 patients with HF with preserved EF (mean age, 68±12 years; 50% women), and 4479 with HF with reduced EF (mean age, 61±13 years; 22% women), there were 642 and 2302 readmissions, with 28% and 45% attributed to HF, respectively. The 1‐year composite event rate for first HF hospitalization or all‐cause death was 11% and 21%, and for total HF hospitalization and all‐cause death was 17.7 and 38.7 per 100 patient‐years in HF with preserved EF and HF with reduced EF, respectively. In HF with preserved EF, consistent independent predictors of these clinical end points included enrollment as an inpatient, Southeast Asian location, and comorbid chronic kidney disease or atrial fibrillation. The same variables were predictive of outcomes in HF with reduced EF except atrial fibrillation, and also included Northeast Asian location, older age, elevated heart rate, decreased systolic blood pressure, diabetes, smoking, and non‐usage of beta blockers. Conclusions One‐year HF rehospitalization and mortality rates were high among Asian patients with HF. Predictors of outcomes identified in this study could aid in risk stratification and timely interventions. Registration URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov ; Unique identifier: NCT01633398.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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