1. Heart Rate At Hospital Discharge Is Associated With Adverse Long Term Outcomes In Patients With Heart Failure.
- Author
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Alomari, Ihab B., Xin Zhao, Hernandez, Adrian F., Eapen, Zubin J., Fonarow, Gregg C., Yancy, Clyde W., Heidenreich, Paul A., Bhatt, Deepak L., and Laskey, Warren K.
- Subjects
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HEART beat , *HEART failure patients , *HOSPITAL admission & discharge , *RATINGS of hospitals , *CARDIAC patients - Abstract
Background: Heart rate (HR) has been identified as a risk factor for adverse longterm outcomes in patients with and without heart disease. However, the relationship between discharge HR and outcomes in patients receiving guideline based therapy for HF remains unknown. Hypothesis: Heart rate at hospital discharge in patients with HF is an independent predictor of mortality and readmission rates at 1 year. Methods: Using the American Heart Association Get With The Guidelines Heart Failure national quality assurance registry linked with Medicare data, long term outcomes for patients =65 years of age hospitalized from 2005-2011 were obtained. Univariable and multivariable analyses were performed to examine the relationship between 1-year outcomes (death or all cause readmission) and discharge HR. Heart rate was analyzed as a categorical (tertiles) or continuous variable. Crude and adjusted odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals for the association between discharge HR and the risk of death or hospitalization by 1-year were obtained from logistic regression modeling. Results: The analysis sample was comprised of 45,672 patients with a valid link to Medicare data and 1 year outcome status. The mean age was 80 ±8 years; % male was 45.7; and the mean ejection fraction was 43.5 ±16. Median discharge HRs for the first, second and third tertiles significantly differed (61, 72 and 87 bpm, respectively, p <0.0001). In univariable and multivariable analyses adjusted for clinical and hospital level variables there was a statistically significant relationship between 1 year outcomes and discharge HR (Table). Conclusion: In hospitalized patients with HF, HR at the time of discharge is an independent predictor of mortality. Despite optimal adherence to current guideline based therapy, the odds for all-cause mortality increased by 13% for every 10 beat increases in HR. The use of HR both as a prognostic variable, as well as potentially modifiable risk factor, may be of value in risk-stratification algorithms at discharge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014