Clinical phenotypes, aetiologies, management, and mortality in acute heart failure: a single‐institution study in Latin‐America

Abstract Aims Little is known regarding acute heart failure (AHF) clinical characteristics and its hospital outcome in Latin America. This study sought to assess the prevalence of, and identify differences among, in‐hospital outcomes in patients hospitalized for AHF who were stratified by clinical p...

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Main Authors: Héctor González‐Pacheco, Amada Álvarez‐Sangabriel, Carlos Martínez‐Sánchez, José L. Briseño‐Cruz, Alfredo Altamirano‐Castillo, Salvador Mendoza‐García, Daniel Manzur‐Sandoval, Luis M. Amezcua‐Guerra, Julio Sandoval, Rafael Bojalil, Diego Araiza‐Garaygordobil, Daniel Sierra‐Lara, Carlos A. Guiza‐Sánchez, Rodrigo Gopar‐Nieto, Camelia Cruz‐Rodríguez, José J. Valdivia‐Nuño, Brandon Salas‐Teles, Alexandra Arias‐Mendoza
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-02-01
Series:ESC Heart Failure
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ehf2.13092
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author Héctor González‐Pacheco
Amada Álvarez‐Sangabriel
Carlos Martínez‐Sánchez
José L. Briseño‐Cruz
Alfredo Altamirano‐Castillo
Salvador Mendoza‐García
Daniel Manzur‐Sandoval
Luis M. Amezcua‐Guerra
Julio Sandoval
Rafael Bojalil
Diego Araiza‐Garaygordobil
Daniel Sierra‐Lara
Carlos A. Guiza‐Sánchez
Rodrigo Gopar‐Nieto
Camelia Cruz‐Rodríguez
José J. Valdivia‐Nuño
Brandon Salas‐Teles
Alexandra Arias‐Mendoza
spellingShingle Héctor González‐Pacheco
Amada Álvarez‐Sangabriel
Carlos Martínez‐Sánchez
José L. Briseño‐Cruz
Alfredo Altamirano‐Castillo
Salvador Mendoza‐García
Daniel Manzur‐Sandoval
Luis M. Amezcua‐Guerra
Julio Sandoval
Rafael Bojalil
Diego Araiza‐Garaygordobil
Daniel Sierra‐Lara
Carlos A. Guiza‐Sánchez
Rodrigo Gopar‐Nieto
Camelia Cruz‐Rodríguez
José J. Valdivia‐Nuño
Brandon Salas‐Teles
Alexandra Arias‐Mendoza
Clinical phenotypes, aetiologies, management, and mortality in acute heart failure: a single‐institution study in Latin‐America
ESC Heart Failure
Acute heart failure
Clinical phenotypes
Latin America
Mortality
author_facet Héctor González‐Pacheco
Amada Álvarez‐Sangabriel
Carlos Martínez‐Sánchez
José L. Briseño‐Cruz
Alfredo Altamirano‐Castillo
Salvador Mendoza‐García
Daniel Manzur‐Sandoval
Luis M. Amezcua‐Guerra
Julio Sandoval
Rafael Bojalil
Diego Araiza‐Garaygordobil
Daniel Sierra‐Lara
Carlos A. Guiza‐Sánchez
Rodrigo Gopar‐Nieto
Camelia Cruz‐Rodríguez
José J. Valdivia‐Nuño
Brandon Salas‐Teles
Alexandra Arias‐Mendoza
author_sort Héctor González‐Pacheco
title Clinical phenotypes, aetiologies, management, and mortality in acute heart failure: a single‐institution study in Latin‐America
title_short Clinical phenotypes, aetiologies, management, and mortality in acute heart failure: a single‐institution study in Latin‐America
title_full Clinical phenotypes, aetiologies, management, and mortality in acute heart failure: a single‐institution study in Latin‐America
title_fullStr Clinical phenotypes, aetiologies, management, and mortality in acute heart failure: a single‐institution study in Latin‐America
title_full_unstemmed Clinical phenotypes, aetiologies, management, and mortality in acute heart failure: a single‐institution study in Latin‐America
title_sort clinical phenotypes, aetiologies, management, and mortality in acute heart failure: a single‐institution study in latin‐america
publisher Wiley
series ESC Heart Failure
issn 2055-5822
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Aims Little is known regarding acute heart failure (AHF) clinical characteristics and its hospital outcome in Latin America. This study sought to assess the prevalence of, and identify differences among, in‐hospital outcomes in patients hospitalized for AHF who were stratified by clinical phenotype at a hospital in Latin America. Methods and results This is a retrospective cohort study of patients with AHF who were hospitalized in the coronary care unit of a Latin American teaching hospital from January 2006 to December 2018. Cox regression analysis was used to identify predictors of mortality. Of 21 042 patients admitted, 7759 (36.6%) had AHF. Their median age was 62 years, and 35% were women. De novo heart failure was seen in 39.4% of patients. Most common was AHF‐associated acute coronary syndromes (ACS‐HF) in 43.0%, decompensated heart failure (DHF) in 33.7%, hypertensive heart failure (HT‐HF) in 11.8%, and cardiogenic shock (CS) in 5.2%. Pulmonary oedema (PO) (3.3%) and right heart failure (RHF) (3.0%) were least frequent. Coronary artery disease was the most frequent aetiology in 56.5% of patients, valvular heart disease in 22.4%, and cardiomyopathies in 12.3%. Other less frequent aetiology included adult congenital heart disease (2.5%), lung diseases (2.1%), acute aortic syndromes (1.4%), pericardial diseases (0.8%), and intracardiac tumours (0.3%). Aetiology could not be established in 1.6% of patients. Before admission, patients with worsening chronic heart failure and reduced ejection fraction were treated with renin–angiotensin system blockers (60.4%), beta‐blockers (42.5%), or spironolactone (34.4%). The percentages of patients given in‐hospital management with intravenous diuretics, vasodilators, inotropes, and vasopressors were 81.2%, 33.4%, 18.9%, and 20.4%, respectively. The overall in‐hospital mortality was 17.9% (71.3%, 43.9%, 23.8%, 14.9%, 13.6%, and 10.1% for CS, PO, RHF, DHF, ACS‐HF, and HT‐HF, respectively; P < 0.0001). Multivariate analysis revealed that PO (hazard ratio [HR] 2.68, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.73–4.14, P < 0.0001) and CS (HR 3.37, 95% CI 2.12–5.35, P < 0.0001) were independent predictors of in‐hospital mortality. Use of intravenous diuretics was linked to reduction of in‐hospital mortality (HR 0.70, 95% CI 0.59–0.59, P < 0.0001). By contrast, increased in‐hospital mortality was associated with the use of intravenous inotrope or vasopressor (HR 1.49, 95% CI 1.27–1.76 and HR 2.91, 95% CI 2.41–3.51, P < 0.0001, respectively). Conclusions Real‐world evidence from a university hospital in Latin America shows that the high mortality among patients with AHF may depend, among other factors, on patients' AHF clinical phenotypes. The clinical characteristics and aetiologies of AHF appear to differ between these data from Mexico and those from European and US registries.
topic Acute heart failure
Clinical phenotypes
Latin America
Mortality
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ehf2.13092
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spelling doaj-fdf1aa9338244c1f82393e7cb9a2fc622021-03-31T03:15:44ZengWileyESC Heart Failure2055-58222021-02-018142343710.1002/ehf2.13092Clinical phenotypes, aetiologies, management, and mortality in acute heart failure: a single‐institution study in Latin‐AmericaHéctor González‐Pacheco0Amada Álvarez‐Sangabriel1Carlos Martínez‐Sánchez2José L. Briseño‐Cruz3Alfredo Altamirano‐Castillo4Salvador Mendoza‐García5Daniel Manzur‐Sandoval6Luis M. Amezcua‐Guerra7Julio Sandoval8Rafael Bojalil9Diego Araiza‐Garaygordobil10Daniel Sierra‐Lara11Carlos A. Guiza‐Sánchez12Rodrigo Gopar‐Nieto13Camelia Cruz‐Rodríguez14José J. Valdivia‐Nuño15Brandon Salas‐Teles16Alexandra Arias‐Mendoza17Coronary Care Unit National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Juan Badiano, Sección XVI, Tlalpan Mexico City 14080 MexicoHeart Failure Clinic and Transplantation National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Mexico City MexicoCoronary Care Unit National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Juan Badiano, Sección XVI, Tlalpan Mexico City 14080 MexicoCoronary Care Unit National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Juan Badiano, Sección XVI, Tlalpan Mexico City 14080 MexicoCoronary Care Unit National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Juan Badiano, Sección XVI, Tlalpan Mexico City 14080 MexicoCoronary Care Unit National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Juan Badiano, Sección XVI, Tlalpan Mexico City 14080 MexicoCoronary Care Unit National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Juan Badiano, Sección XVI, Tlalpan Mexico City 14080 MexicoDepartment of Immunology National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Mexico City MexicoDepartment of Immunology National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Mexico City MexicoDepartment of Immunology National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Mexico City MexicoCoronary Care Unit National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Juan Badiano, Sección XVI, Tlalpan Mexico City 14080 MexicoCoronary Care Unit National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Juan Badiano, Sección XVI, Tlalpan Mexico City 14080 MexicoHeart Failure Clinic and Transplantation National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Mexico City MexicoCoronary Care Unit National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Juan Badiano, Sección XVI, Tlalpan Mexico City 14080 MexicoCoronary Care Unit National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Juan Badiano, Sección XVI, Tlalpan Mexico City 14080 MexicoCoronary Care Unit National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Juan Badiano, Sección XVI, Tlalpan Mexico City 14080 MexicoCoronary Care Unit National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Juan Badiano, Sección XVI, Tlalpan Mexico City 14080 MexicoCoronary Care Unit National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico City Juan Badiano, Sección XVI, Tlalpan Mexico City 14080 MexicoAbstract Aims Little is known regarding acute heart failure (AHF) clinical characteristics and its hospital outcome in Latin America. This study sought to assess the prevalence of, and identify differences among, in‐hospital outcomes in patients hospitalized for AHF who were stratified by clinical phenotype at a hospital in Latin America. Methods and results This is a retrospective cohort study of patients with AHF who were hospitalized in the coronary care unit of a Latin American teaching hospital from January 2006 to December 2018. Cox regression analysis was used to identify predictors of mortality. Of 21 042 patients admitted, 7759 (36.6%) had AHF. Their median age was 62 years, and 35% were women. De novo heart failure was seen in 39.4% of patients. Most common was AHF‐associated acute coronary syndromes (ACS‐HF) in 43.0%, decompensated heart failure (DHF) in 33.7%, hypertensive heart failure (HT‐HF) in 11.8%, and cardiogenic shock (CS) in 5.2%. Pulmonary oedema (PO) (3.3%) and right heart failure (RHF) (3.0%) were least frequent. Coronary artery disease was the most frequent aetiology in 56.5% of patients, valvular heart disease in 22.4%, and cardiomyopathies in 12.3%. Other less frequent aetiology included adult congenital heart disease (2.5%), lung diseases (2.1%), acute aortic syndromes (1.4%), pericardial diseases (0.8%), and intracardiac tumours (0.3%). Aetiology could not be established in 1.6% of patients. Before admission, patients with worsening chronic heart failure and reduced ejection fraction were treated with renin–angiotensin system blockers (60.4%), beta‐blockers (42.5%), or spironolactone (34.4%). The percentages of patients given in‐hospital management with intravenous diuretics, vasodilators, inotropes, and vasopressors were 81.2%, 33.4%, 18.9%, and 20.4%, respectively. The overall in‐hospital mortality was 17.9% (71.3%, 43.9%, 23.8%, 14.9%, 13.6%, and 10.1% for CS, PO, RHF, DHF, ACS‐HF, and HT‐HF, respectively; P < 0.0001). Multivariate analysis revealed that PO (hazard ratio [HR] 2.68, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.73–4.14, P < 0.0001) and CS (HR 3.37, 95% CI 2.12–5.35, P < 0.0001) were independent predictors of in‐hospital mortality. Use of intravenous diuretics was linked to reduction of in‐hospital mortality (HR 0.70, 95% CI 0.59–0.59, P < 0.0001). By contrast, increased in‐hospital mortality was associated with the use of intravenous inotrope or vasopressor (HR 1.49, 95% CI 1.27–1.76 and HR 2.91, 95% CI 2.41–3.51, P < 0.0001, respectively). Conclusions Real‐world evidence from a university hospital in Latin America shows that the high mortality among patients with AHF may depend, among other factors, on patients' AHF clinical phenotypes. The clinical characteristics and aetiologies of AHF appear to differ between these data from Mexico and those from European and US registries.https://doi.org/10.1002/ehf2.13092Acute heart failureClinical phenotypesLatin AmericaMortality