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Challenging the two concepts in determining the appropriate pre-discharge N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide treatment target in acute decompensated heart failure patients: absolute or relative discharge levels?

Authors :
Valerio Verdiani
Yigal M. Pinto
Luc W. Eurlings
Paulo Bettencourt
Khibar Salah
Antoni Bayes-Genis
Jan P. Tijssen
Luca Bettari
Susan Stienen
Marco Metra
Valentina Lazzarini
Joana Pimenta
Wouter E.M. Kok
Source :
European Journal of Heart Failure. 17:936-944
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Wiley, 2015.

Abstract

Aims NT-proBNP is a strong predictor for readmissions and mortality in acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) patients. We assessed whether absolute or relative NT-proBNP levels should be used as pre discharge treatment target. Methods and results Our study population was assembled from seven ADHF cohorts. We defined absolute ( 30, >50, and >70%). Population attributable risk fraction (PARF) is the proportion of all-cause 6-month mortality in the population that would be reduced if all patients attain the NT-proBNP target. PARF was determined for each target as well as the percentage of patients attaining the NT-proBNP target. Attainability was investigated by logistic regression analysis. A total of 1266 patients [age 74 (64–80), 60% male] was studied. For every absolute NT-proBNP level, a corresponding percentage reduction was found that resulted in similar PARFs. The highest PARF (∼60–70%) was observed for 70%, but attainability was low (27% and 22%, respectively). The strongest predictor for not attaining these targets was admission NT-proBNP. In admission NT-proBNP tertiles, PARFs were significantly different for absolute, but not for relative targets. Conclusion In an ADHF population, pre-discharge absolute or relative NT-proBNP targets may both be useful as they have similar effects on PARF. However, depending on admission NT-proBNP, absolute targets show varying PARFs, while PARFs for relative targets were similar. A relative target is predicted to reduce mortality consistently across the whole spectrum of ADHF patients, while this is not the case using a single absolute target.

Details

ISSN :
13889842
Volume :
17
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Heart Failure
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f035a00e666bbe20ffe3d98ca90f268d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ejhf.320