The H2FPEF score was an independent predictor of future heart failure-related events in stable outpatients with cardiovascular risk factors (P<0.001).
Cohort (n=356)
Does the H2FPEF score predict future HF-related events in stable outpatients with cardiovascular risk factors?
The H2FPEF score, originally designed to diagnose HFpEF, independently predicts future heart failure events in stable outpatients with cardiovascular risk factors.
valor p: p=<0.001
Abstract Aims The prediction of future heart failure (HF) in stable outpatients is often difficult for general practitioners and cardiologists. Recently, the H2FPEF score (0–9 points) has been proposed for the discrimination of HF with preserved ejection fraction from non-cardiac causes of dyspnoea. The six clinical and echocardiographic variables that constitute the H2FPEF score include the following: (i) obesity (H); (ii) the use of ≥2 antihypertensive drugs (H); (iii) atrial fibrillation (F); (iv) pulmonary hypertension (P); (v) an age 60 years (E); and (vi) E/e' 9 (F). We performed an external validation study that investigated whether the H2FPEF score could predict future HF-related events in stable outpatients with cardiovascular risk factor(s) in Japan. Methods and results In this prospective cohort study, after exclusion of 195 from 551 consecutive, stable Japanese outpatients with at least one cardiovascular risk factor who were enrolled between September 2010 and July 2013, the remaining 356 outpatients (171 men, 185 women, mean age 73.2 years) were eligible for the analysis. We calculated the H2FPEF score (0–9 points), and followed up the patients for an average of 517 days. In all of the 356 patients, the mean H2FPEF score was 3.1 ± 1.8, and 15 developed HF-related events during the follow-up period, including cardiovascular death (n = 2) and hospitalization for HF decompensation (n = 13). Multivariate Cox proportional hazards analysis showed that the H2FPEF score was an independent predictor of future HF-related events (P 0.001 for all three models). Kaplan–Meier survival curves showed a significantly higher probability of HF-related events in the outpatients with a high H2FPEF score (P 0.001). In receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis, the H2FPEF score was significantly associated with the occurrence of future HF-related events (P 0.001). In ROC curve analysis, the sensitivity, specificity, and positive likelihood ratio of a H2FPEF score of 7 points to predict HF-related events were 47%, 96%, and 11.4%, respectively. Conclusions The H2FPEF score could provide useful information for future HF-related events in stable outpatients with cardiovascular risk factor(s) in Japan.
Suzuki et al. (Wed,) conducted a cohort in Stable outpatients with cardiovascular risk factors (n=356). H2FPEF score vs. Low H2FPEF score was evaluated on Future HF-related events (cardiovascular death and hospitalization for HF decompensation) (p=<0.001). The H2FPEF score was an independent predictor of future heart failure-related events in stable outpatients with cardiovascular risk factors (P<0.001).
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