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Influence of the length of hospitalisation in post-discharge outcomes in patients with acute heart failure: Results of the LOHRCA study.

Authors :
Miró Ò
Padrosa J
Takagi K
Gayat É
Gil V
Llorens P
Martín-Sánchez FJ
Herrero-Puente P
Jacob J
Montero MM
Tost J
Díez MPL
Traveria L
Torres-Gárate R
Alonso MI
Agüera C
Valero A
Javaloyes P
Peacock WF
Bueno H
Mebazaa A
Fuentes M
Gil C
Alonso H
Garmila P
García GL
Yáñez-Palma MC
López SI
Escoda R
Xipell C
Sánchez C
Gaytan JM
Pérez-Durá MJ
Salvo E
Pavón J
Noval A
Torres JM
López-Grima ML
Valero A
Juan MÁ
Aguirre A
Morales JE
Masó SM
Alonso MI
Ruiz F
Franco JM
Mecina AB
Tost J
Sánchez S
Carbajosa V
Piñera P
Nicolás JAS
Garate RT
Alquezar A
Rizzi MA
Herrera S
Roset A
Cabello I
Richard F
Pérez JMÁ
Diez MPL
Álvarez JV
García BP
Sánchez González MGGY
Javaloyes P
Marquina V
Jiménez I
Hernández N
Brouzet B
Ramos S
López A
Andueza JA
Romero R
Ruíz M
Calvache R
Lorca MT
Calderón L
Arriaga BA
Sierra B
Mojarro EM
Bécquer LT
Burillo G
García LL
LaSalle GC
Urbano CA
Soto ABG
Padial ED
Ferrer ES
Garrido M
Lucas FJ
Gaya R
Bibiano C
Mir M
Rodríguez B
Sánchez N
Carballo JL
Rodríguez-Adrada E
Rodríguez B
Source :
European journal of internal medicine [Eur J Intern Med] 2019 Dec; Vol. 70, pp. 24-32. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Aug 23.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Objective: To investigate the relationship between length of hospitalisation (LOH) and post-discharge outcomes in acute heart failure (AHF) patients and to ascertain whether there are different patterns according to department of initial hospitalisation.<br />Methods: Consecutive AHF patients hospitalised in 41 Spanish centres were grouped based on the LOH (<6/6-10/11-15/>15 days). Outcomes were defined as 90-day post-discharge all-cause mortality, AHF readmissions, and the combination of both. Hazard ratios (HRs), adjusted by chronic conditions and severity of decompensation, were calculated for groups with LOH >6 days vs. LOH <6 days (reference), and stratified by hospitalisation in cardiology, internal medicine, geriatrics, or short-stay units.<br />Results: We included 8563 patients (mean age: 80 (SD = 10) years, 55.5% women), with a median LOH of 7 days (IQR 4-11): 2934 (34.3%) had a LOH <6 days, 3184 (37.2%) 6-10 days, 1287 (15.0%) 11-15 days, and 1158 (13.5%) >15 days. The 90-day post-discharge mortality was 11.4%, readmission 32.2%, and combined endpoint 37.4%. Mortality was increased by 36.5% (95%CI = 13.0-64.9) when LOH was 11-15 days, and by 72.0% (95%CI = 42.6-107.5) when >15 days. Conversely, no differences were found in readmission risk, and the combined endpoint only increased 21.6% (95%CI = 8.4-36.4) for LOH >15 days. Stratified analysis by hospitalisation departments rendered similar post-discharge outcomes, with all exhibiting increased mortality for LOH >15 days and no significant increments in readmission risk.<br />Conclusions: Short hospitalisations are not associated with worse outcomes. While post-discharge readmissions are not affected by LOH, mortality risk increases as the LOH lengthens. These findings were similar across hospitalisation departments.<br /> (Copyright © 2019 European Federation of Internal Medicine. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1879-0828
Volume :
70
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European journal of internal medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31451322
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejim.2019.08.007