AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined the impact of transient inotropic therapy in hospitalized patients with advanced heart failure (HF), particularly those with a left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) under 50%.
  • It involved a cohort of 737 patients, predominantly male, with various underlying causes of heart failure and revealed that inotropic therapy was linked to a significantly higher risk of in-hospital death or urgent heart transplant.
  • However, after discharge, the short-term use of inotropes did not correlate with negative outcomes, suggesting that their intermittent use may not impact long-term prognosis in these patients.

Article Abstract

Objectives: The prognostic significance of transient use of inotropes has been sufficiently studied in recent heart failure (HF) populations. We hypothesised that risk stratification in these patients could contribute to patient selection for advanced therapies.

Methods: We analysed a prospective cohort of adult patients admitted with decompensated HF and ejection fraction (left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF)) less than 50%. We explored the outcomes of patients requiring inotropic therapy during hospital admission and after discharge.

Results: The study included 737 patients, (64.0% male), with a median age of 58 years (IQR 48-66 years). Main aetiologies were dilated cardiomyopathy in 273 (37.0%) patients, ischaemic heart disease in 195 (26.5%) patients and Chagas disease in 163 (22.1%) patients. Median LVEF was 26 % (IQR 22%-35%). Inotropes were used in 518 (70.3%) patients. In 431 (83.2%) patients, a single inotrope was administered. Inotropic therapy was associated with higher risk of in-hospital death/urgent heart transplant (OR=10.628, 95% CI 5.055 to 22.344, p<0.001). At 180-day follow-up, of the 431 patients discharged home, 39 (9.0%) died, 21 (4.9%) underwent transplantation and 183 (42.4%) were readmitted. Inotropes were not associated with outcome (death, transplant and rehospitalisation) after discharge.

Conclusions: Inotropic drugs are still widely used in patients with advanced decompensated HF and are associated with a worse in-hospital prognosis. In contrast with previous results, intermittent use of inotropes during hospitalisation did not determine a worse prognosis at 180-day follow-up. These data may add to prognostic evaluation in patients with advanced HF in centres where mechanical circulatory support is not broadly available.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6330199PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/openhrt-2018-000923DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

inotropic therapy
12
patients
10
risk stratification
8
stratification patients
8
heart failure
8
ejection fraction
8
prognosis risk
4
patients decompensated
4
heart
4
decompensated heart
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!