Summary: | Dmitry Shchekochikhin,1 Tatiana Nikiforova,1 Alexandra Shilova,2 Alexey Nesterov,2 Olga Baturina,1 Daria Gognieva,1 Natalia Kozlovskaya,3 Abram Syrkin,1 Philipp Kopylov11Department of Preventive and Emergency Cardiology of the Faculty of Medicine, I.M. Sechenov First Moscow State Medical University, Moscow 119991, Russia; 2Department of Interventional Cardiology and Cardiac Rehabilitation, Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University (RNRMU), Moscow 117997, Russia; 3Department of Internal Medicine and Occupational Medicine, Eramishancev Moscow Clinical Hospital, Moscow 129327, RussiaBackground: Determining the prognosis of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) is problematic, as the ejection fraction cannot be used. Formulae that estimate glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) may be potential prognosticators for this condition, since renal dysfunction is a well-known predictor of poor outcomes of all forms of heart failure.Methods: A prospective observational study of 117 HFpEF patients (average age 71.6±9.1 years; 65.8% women) who had eGFR determined after their first episode of cardiac decompensation by two different chronic kidney disease epidemiology collaboration (CKD-EPI) equations. The ability to predict hospitalizations and mortality over 24 months by the two equations were compared.Results: The CKD-EPI formula based on serum creatinine only performed poorly. However, the CKD-EPI equation that used both serum creatinine and serum cystatin C was associated with unfavorable outcome: eGFR 2, predicted 24-month mortality (HR=4.21 [1.32;13.43], p=0.02) and the combined endpoint of mortality and hospitalization (HR 2.45 [1.42;4.22], p=0.001). .Conclusions: eGFR by the CKD-EPI equation based on serum creatinine and cystatin C levels, but not by the CKD-EPI creatinine only equation, predicts the outcome of HFpEF patients.Keywords: cystatin C, CKD-EPI equation, heart failure with preserved left ventricle ejection fraction, estimated glomerular filtration rate
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