Does sustained adherence to ESC guideline-recommended medications reduce long-term mortality in hospitalized HFrEF patients?
Sustained or even discontinuous adherence to guideline-recommended medications is associated with significantly lower long-term all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in HFrEF patients compared to sustained non-adherence.
WHAT IS KNOWN AND OBJECTIVE: The real-life prognostic impact on long-term survival of continuous or discontinuous adherence to ESC guideline-recommended drugs in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) patients has rarely been investigated. Here, we present the long-term association of longitudinal prescription of guideline-recommended drugs with 3-year all-cause and cardiovascular (CV) mortality in HFrEF patients. METHODS: We used data from the EPICAL2 cohort study of 624 hospitalized HFrEF patients. Using the sequence analysis, we classified patients into five groups of long-term adherence according to the continuity/discontinuity of their prescription adherence to guidelines over a 3-year follow-up, as follow: 316 (50.6%) patients in the sustained adherence group, 163 (26.1%) in the sustained non-adherence group, 79 (12.6%) in the adherence to non-adherence group, 43 (6.9%) in the non-adherence to adherence group and 23 (3.7%) in the multiple switches group. The associations between all-cause mortality and CV mortality and the adherence groups were determined by Cox and Fine-Gray models, respectively. To account for immortal time bias, we performed a landmark analysis at 24 months. Patients who died, prior to the landmark time, were excluded from this analysis and long-term adherence groups were redefined. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: After adjustment for confounding factors, as compared to the sustained non-adherence group, the sustained adherence group showed lower all-cause and CV mortality (hazard ratio HR = 0.37 0.25-0.56 and sub-distribution hazard ratio SHR = 0.33 0.20-0.56). Both clinical outcomes were also significantly improved in the adherence to non-adherence group (HR = 0.25 0.13-0.45 and SHR = 0.20 0.10-0.41), the non-adherence to adherence (HR = 0.24 0.11-0.55 and SHR = 0.11 0.04-0.30), and for the multiple switches group (HR = 0.13 0.07-0.51 and SHR = 0.12 0.08-0.43). Results from landmark analysis were comparable to the main results. WHAT IS NEW AND CONCLUSION: As in all observational studies, our results may be affected by residual confounding related to unmeasured confounders, although we attempted to adjust for many confounders. Even a discontinuous prescription of the recommended drugs over time was associated with better long-term outcomes. In other words, whatever the time of HFrEF evolution, prescribing recommended drugs at some point was always better than never prescribing.
Bitar et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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