Anemia at hospital admission and its relation to outcomes in patients with heart failure (from the polish cohort of 2 European Society of Cardiology Heart Failure Registries)

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Identifiers

Publication date

Authors

Tyminska, Agata
Kaplon-Cieslicka, Agnieszka
Ozieranski, Krzysztof
Peller, Michal
Balsam, Pawel
Marchel, Michal
Maggioni, Aldo P.
Jankowska, Ewa A
Drozdz, Jaroslaw

Advisors

Other responsabilities

Journal Title

Bibliographic citation

Tyminska A, Kaplon-Cieslicka A, Ozieranski K, et al. Anemia at hospital admission and its relation to outcomes in patients with heart failure (from the polish cohort of 2 European Society of Cardiology Heart Failure Registries). Am J Cardiol. 2017; 119(12): 2021-2029

Type of academic work

Academic degree

Abstract

[Abstract] Anemia is a commonly observed co-morbidity in heart failure (HF). The aim of the study was to assess prevalence, risk factors for, and effect of anemia on short- and long-term outcomes in HF. The study included 1,394 Caucasian patients hospitalized for HF, with known hemoglobin concentration on hospital admission, participating in 2 HF registries of the European Society of Cardiology (Pilot and Long-Term). Anemia was defined as hemoglobin concentration of <13 g/dl for men and <12 g/dl for women. Primary end points were (1) all-cause death at 1 year and (2) a composite of all-cause death and rehospitalization for HF at 1 year. Secondary end points included inter alia death during index hospitalization. In addition, we investigated the effect of changes in hemoglobin concentration during hospitalization on prognosis. Anemia occurred in 33% of patients. Predictors of anemia included older age, diabetes, greater New York Heart Association class at hospital admission and kidney disease. During 1-year follow-up, 21% of anemic and 13% of nonanemic patients died (p <0.0001). Combined primary end point occurred in 45% of anemic and in 33% of nonanemic patients (p <0.0001). Anemia was strongly predictive of all the prespecified clinical end points in univariate analyses but not in multivariate analyses. Changes in hemoglobin concentration during hospitalization had no effect on 1-year outcomes. In conclusion, anemia was present in 1/3 of patients with HF. Mild-to-moderate anemia seems more a marker of older age, worse clinical condition, and a higher co-morbidity burden, rather than an independent risk factor in HF.

Description

Rights

Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 España
Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 España

Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 España