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International differences in clinical characteristics, management, and outcomes in acute heart failure patients: better short-term outcomes in patients enrolled in Eastern Europe and Russia in the PROTECT trial

Authors :
Beth A. Davison
Marco Metra
Gad Cotter
Susanna R. Stevens
Michael M. Givertz
Robert J. Mentz
Daniel M. Bloomfield
Christopher M. O'Connor
Piotr Ponikowski
Mona Fiuzat
Chaim Lotan
John R. Teerlink
Viacheslav Mareev
Liliana Grinfeld
Karen Chiswell
Adriaan A. Voors
John G.F. Cleland
Mikhail Ruda
Barry M. Massie
Source :
European Journal of Heart Failure. 16:614-624
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Wiley, 2014.

Abstract

AimsThe implications of geographical variation are unknown following adjustment for hospital length of stay (LOS) in heart failure (HF) trials that included patients whether or not they had systolic dysfunction. We investigated regional differences in an international acute HF trial. Methods and resultsThe PROTECT trial investigated 2033 patients with acute HF and renal dysfunction hospitalized at 173 sites in 17 countries with randomization to rolofylline or placebo. We grouped enrolling countries into six regions. Baseline characteristics, in-hospital management, and outcomes were explored by region. The primary study outcome was 60-day mortality or cardiovascular/renal hospitalization. Secondary outcomes included 180-day mortality. Of 2033 patients, 33% were from Eastern Europe, 19% from Western Europe, 16% from Israel, 15% from North America, 14% from Russia, and 3% from Argentina. Marked differences in baseline characteristics, HF phenotype, in-hospital diuretic and vasodilator strategies, and LOS were observed by region. LOS was shortest in North America and Israel (median 5 days) and longest in Russia (median 15 days). Regional event rates varied significantly. Following multivariable adjustment, region was an independent predictor of the risk of mortality/hospitalization at 60 days, with the lowest risk in Russia (hazard ratio 0.39, 95% confidence interval 0.23-0.64 vs. Western Europe) due to lower rehospitalization; mortality differences were attenuated by 180 days. ConclusionsIn an international HF trial, there were differences in baseline characteristics, treatments, LOS, and rehospitalization amongst regions, but little difference in longer term mortality. Rehospitalization differences exist independent of LOS. This analysis may help inform future trial design and should be externally validated.

Details

ISSN :
13889842
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Heart Failure
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f9c598fb84b164121acecad63eba533e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ejhf.92