What is the prevalence of unrecognized heart failure in elderly primary care patients presenting with shortness of breath on exertion?
585 patients aged 65 years or over presenting to primary care with shortness of breath on exertion in the previous 12 months, without an established echocardiographic confirmed diagnosis of heart failure. Mean age 74.1 years, 54.5% female.
Selective screening strategy (history taking, physical examination, electrocardiography, and NT-proBNP testing, followed by open-access echocardiography if ECG was abnormal or NT-proBNP >15 pmol/L [≈125 pg/mL])
Prevalence of unrecognized heart failure (established by an expert panel according to European Society of Cardiology guidelines)
Unrecognized heart failure, particularly with preserved ejection fraction, is highly prevalent (15.7%) among elderly primary care patients presenting with exertional dyspnea.
Abstract Aims The majority of patients with heart failure are diagnosed in primary care, but underdiagnosis is common. Shortness of breath is a prevalent complaint of older persons and one of the key symptoms of heart failure. We assessed the prevalence of unrecognized heart failure in elderly patients presenting to primary care with shortness of breath on exertion. Methods and results This was a cross-sectional selective screening study. Patients aged 65 years or over presenting to primary care with shortness of breath on exertion in the previous 12 months were eligible when not known to have an established, echocardiographic confirmed diagnosis of heart failure. All participants underwent history taking, physical examination, electrocardiography, and a blood test of N-terminal pro B-type natriuretic peptide (NTproBNP). Only those with an abnormal electrocardiogram or NTproBNP level exceeding the exclusionary cut-point for non-acute onset heart failure (15 pmol/L (≈125 pg/mL) underwent open-access echocardiography. An expert panel established presence or absence of heart failure according to the criteria of the European Society of Cardiology heart failure guidelines. The mean age of the 585 participants was 74.1 (SD 6.3) years, and 54.5% were female. In total, 92 (15.7%, 95% CI 12.9–19.0) participants had heart failure: 17 (2.9%, 95% CI 1.8–4.7) had heart failure with a reduced ejection fraction (≤45%), 70 (12.0%, 95% CI 9.5–14.9) had heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, and five (0.9%, 95% CI 0.3–2.1) had isolated right-sided heart failure. Conclusion Elderly primary care patients with shortness of breath on exertion often have unrecognized heart failure, mainly with preserved ejection fraction.
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Evelien E.S. van Riet
University Medical Center Utrecht
Arno W. Hoes
Preventive Cardiology
Alexander Limburg
Diakonessenhuis hospital
European Journal of Heart Failure
University Medical Center Utrecht
Meander Medisch Centrum
Diakonessenhuis hospital
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Riet et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/699615e3ecd6106904aa6df0 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/ejhf.110