Mortality rates in chronic heart failure patients decreased from 12.5% to 7.8%, with a lower contribution of sudden death from 33.6% to 12.7% over 15 years.
Does contemporary heart failure management improve survival and change the mode of death compared to historic management in outpatients with chronic heart failure caused by left ventricular systolic dysfunction?
Outpatients with chronic heart failure caused by left ventricular systolic dysfunction
Contemporary heart failure management (2006-2009)
Historic heart failure management (1993-1995)
Mortality, mode of death, symptoms, and clinical characteristicshard clinical
Survival has significantly improved and sudden death contributes less to mortality in patients with chronic heart failure with reduced ejection fraction over a 15-year period, reflecting advances in medical therapy.
Absolute Event Rate: 0% vs 0%
Background— Therapies for patients with chronic heart failure caused by left ventricular systolic dysfunction have advanced substantially over recent decades. The cumulative effect of these therapies on mortality, mode of death, symptoms, and clinical characteristics has yet to be defined. Methods and Results— This study was a comparison of 2 prospective cohort studies of outpatients with chronic heart failure caused by left ventricular systolic dysfunction performed between 1993 and 1995 (historic cohort: n=281) and 2006 and 2009 (contemporary cohort: n=357). In the historic cohort, 83% were prescribed angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and 8.5% were prescribed β-adrenoceptor antagonists, compared with 89% and 80%, respectively, in the contemporary cohort. Mortality rates over the first year of follow-up declined from 12.5% to 7.8% between eras ( P =0.04), and sudden death contributed less to contemporary mortality (33.6% versus 12.7%; P <0.001). New York Heart Association class declined between eras ( P <0.001). QTc dispersion across the chest leads declined from 85 ms (SD, 2) to 34 ms (SD, 1) and left ventricular end-diastolic dimensions declined from 65 mm (SD, 0.6) to 59 mm (SD, 0.5) (both P <0.001). Conclusions— Survival has significantly improved in patients with chronic heart failure caused by left ventricular systolic dysfunction over the past 15 years; furthermore, sudden death makes a much smaller contribution to mortality, and noncardiac mortality is a correspondingly greater contribution. This has been accompanied by an improvement in symptoms and some markers of adverse electric and structural left ventricular remodeling.
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Cubbon et al. (Thu,) reported a other. Mortality rates in chronic heart failure patients decreased from 12.5% to 7.8%, with a lower contribution of sudden death from 33.6% to 12.7% over 15 years.
synapsesocial.com/papers/697a3929e3885199a727c628 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/circheartfailure.110.959882
Richard M. Cubbon
Heart Failure & Transplant
Chris P Gale
Heart Failure & Transplant
Lorraine Kearney
University of Leeds
Circulation Heart Failure
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