AI Article Synopsis

  • Non-cardiovascular comorbidities, like diabetes and COPD, significantly affect the prognosis of heart failure patients, impacting quality of life and increasing mortality and hospital admission rates.
  • Most studies focused on mortality related to these comorbidities, with findings indicating that severe cases significantly heighten the risk of death and hospitalizations.
  • There's a lack of research on how changes in the severity of these comorbidities over time influence heart failure outcomes, suggesting the need for better integration of this information in treatment strategies.

Article Abstract

Background: Non-cardiovascular comorbidities are recognised as independent prognostic factors in selected heart failure (HF) populations, but the evidence on non-selected HF and how comorbid disease severity and change impacts on outcomes has not been synthesised. We identified primary HF comorbidity follow-up studies to compare the impact of non-cardiovascular comorbidity, severity and change on the outcomes of quality of life, all-cause hospital admissions and all-cause mortality.

Methods: Literature databases (Jan 1990-May 2013) were screened using validated strategies and quality appraisal (QUIPS tool). Adjusted hazard ratios for the main HF outcomes were combined using random effects meta-analysis and inclusion of comorbidity in prognostic models was described.

Results: There were 68 primary HF studies covering nine non-cardiovascular comorbidities. Most were on diabetes mellitus (DM), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and renal dysfunction (RD) for the outcome of mortality (93%) and hospital admissions (16%), median follow-up of 4 years. The adjusted associations between HF comorbidity and mortality were DM (HR 1.34; 95% CI 1.2, 1.5), COPD (1.39; 1.2, 1.6) and RD (1.52; 1.3, 1.7). Comorbidity severity increased mortality from moderate to severe disease by an estimated 78%, 42% and 80% respectively. The risk of hospital admissions increased up to 50% for each disease. Few studies or prognostic models included comorbidity change.

Conclusions: Non-cardiovascular comorbidity and severity significantly increases the prognostic risk of poor outcomes in non-selected HF populations but there is a major gap in investigating change in comorbid status over time. The evidence supports a step-change for the inclusion of comorbidity severity in new HF interventions to improve prognostic outcomes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4518480PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2015.05.180DOI Listing

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