Back to Search Start Over

Complementary roles of simple variables, NYHA and N-BNP, in indicating aerobic capacity and severity of heart failure

Authors :
Russell J. O’Brien
S.G. Williams
Steve Taylor
Lip-Bun Tan
Y.F. Li
Leong L. Ng
David Wright
Source :
International Journal of Cardiology. 102:279-286
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2005.

Abstract

The extent of exercise intolerance in patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) is dependent on and representative of the severity of heart failure. However, few primary care physicians have direct access to facilities for formal exercise testing. We have therefore explored whether information readily obtainable in the community can reliably predict the functional capacity of patients.Ninety-six subjects with a wide range of cardiac function (10 healthy controls and 86 CHF patients with NYHA classes I-IV, LVEF 36.9+/-15.2%) were recruited into the study and had resting plasma N-BNP and cardiopulmonary exercise testing to measure peak oxygen consumption (VO2). Significantly higher N-BNP levels were found in the CHF group (299.3 [704.8] fmol/ml, median [IQR]) compared with the healthy control group (7.2 [51.2] fmol/ml), p0.0001. There were significant correlations between peak VO2 and N-BNP levels (R=0.64, P0.001), peak VO2 and NYHA class (R=0.76, P=0.001), but no significant correlation was seen between peak VO2 and LVEF (R=0.0788, P=0.33). Multivariate analysis identified plasma N-BNP (P0.0001) and NYHA class (P0.0001) as significant independent predictors of peak VO2. Logistic modelling with NYHA class and log N-BNP to predict peak VO220 ml/kg/min showed that the area under the curve of receiver-operating-characteristic (ROC) curve was 0.906 (95% CI 0.844-0.968). A nomogram based on the data has been constructed to allow clinicians to estimate the likelihood of peak VO2 to be20 ml/kg/min for given values of plasma N-BNP and NYHA class.By combining information from a simple objective blood test (N-BNP) and a simple scoring of functional status (NYHA), a clinician can deduce the aerobic exercise capacity and indirectly the extent of cardiac dysfunction of patients with CHF.

Details

ISSN :
01675273
Volume :
102
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Cardiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0f4258e77731ad0342498206e58c918d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2004.05.054