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Beta-blockers are associated with better long-term survival in patients with Takotsubo syndrome

Authors :
Angelo Silverio
Guido Parodi
Fernando Scudiero
Eduardo Bossone
Marco Di Maio
Olga Vriz
Michele Bellino
Concetta Zito
Gennaro Provenza
Ilaria Radano
Cesare Baldi
Antonello D'Andrea
Giuseppina Novo
Ciro Mauro
Fausto Rigo
Pasquale Innelli
Jorge Salerno-Uriarte
Matteo Cameli
Carmine Vecchione
Francesco Antonini Canterin
Gennaro Galasso
Rodolfo Citro
Silverio, Angelo
Parodi, Guido
Scudiero, Fernando
Bossone, Eduardo
Di Maio, Marco
Vriz, Olga
Bellino, Michele
Zito, Concetta
Provenza, Gennaro
Radano, Ilaria
Baldi, Cesare
D'Andrea, Antonello
Novo, Giuseppina
Mauro, Ciro
Rigo, Fausto
Innelli, Pasquale
Salerno-Uriarte, Jorge
Cameli, Matteo
Vecchione, Carmine
Antonini Canterin, Francesco
Galasso, Gennaro
Citro, Rodolfo
Source :
Heart. 108:1369-1376
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMJ, 2022.

Abstract

ObjectiveThe advantage of beta-blockers has been postulated in patients with Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) given the pathophysiological role of catecholamines. We hypothesised that beta-blocker treatment after discharge may improve the long-term clinical outcome in this patient population.MethodsThis was an observational, multicentre study including consecutive patients with TTS diagnosis prospectively enrolled in the Takotsubo Italian Network (TIN) register from January 2007 to December 2018. TTS was diagnosed according to the TIN, Heart Failure Association and InterTAK Diagnostic Criteria. The primary study outcome was the occurrence of all-cause death at the longest available follow-up; secondary outcomes were TTS recurrence, cardiac and non-cardiac death.ResultsThe study population included 825 patients (median age: 72.0 (63.0–78.0) years; 91.9 % female): 488 (59.2%) were discharged on beta-blockers and 337 (40.8%) without beta-blockers. The median follow-up was 24.0 months. The adjusted Cox regression analysis showed a significantly lower risk for all-cause death (adjusted HR: 0.563; 95% CI: 0.356 to 0.889) and non-cardiac death (adjusted HR: 0.525; 95% CI: 0.309 to 0.893) in patients receiving versus those not receiving beta-blockers, but no significant differences in terms of TTS recurrence (adjusted HR: 0.607; 95% CI: 0.311 to 1.187) and cardiac death (adjusted HR: 0.699; 95% CI: 0.284 to 1.722). The positive survival effect of beta-blockers was higher in patients with hypertension than in those without (pinteraction=0.014), and in patients who developed cardiogenic shock during the acute phase than in those who did not (pinteraction=0.047).ConclusionsIn this real-world register population, beta-blockers were associated with a significantly higher long-term survival, particularly in patients with hypertension and in those who developed cardiogenic shock during the acute phase.

Details

ISSN :
1468201X and 13556037
Volume :
108
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Heart
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2a59b57fd807c80171ad49e3a3de69a8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/heartjnl-2021-320543