Brachial pulse pressure in acute heart failure. Results of the Heart Failure Registry
Identifiers
Identifiers
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11940/15841
PMID: 31814303
DOI: 10.1002/ehf2.12537
ISSN: 2055-5822
Corporate author
European Society of Cardiology Heart Failure Long-Term Registry Investigators groupDate issued
2019Journal title
ESC HEART FAILURE
Type of content
Artigo
DeCS
disfunción ventricular | pronóstico | anciano | presión sanguínea | estudios prospectivos | mediana edad | humanos | arteria braquial | sistema de registros | insuficiencia cardíacaMeSH
Ventricular Dysfunction | Middle Aged | Humans | Registries | Blood Pressure | Prospective Studies | Aged | Heart Failure | Brachial Artery | PrognosisAbstract
AIMS: To investigate the still uncertain independent prognostic impact of pulse pressure (PP) in acute heart failure (HF), in particular across the left ventricular ejection fraction (EF) phenotypes, and the potential contribution of PP in outlining the individual phenotypes. METHODS AND RESULTS: We prospectively evaluated 1-year death and rehospitalization in 4314 patients admitted for acute HF grouped by EF and stratified by their PP level on admission. In HF with reduced (< 40%) EF (HFrEF), the highest quartiles of PP had the lowest unadjusted [hazard ratio (HR) 0.77, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.61-0.98] and adjusted (HR 0.64 0.50-0.82) risk of 1 year all cause death compared to the lowest quartile. Its prognostic impact was partially mediated by systolic blood pressure (SBP). In HF with preserved (>/= 50%) EF (HFpEF), the intermediate quartile of PP showed the lowest 1 year all cause mortality in unadjusted (HR 0.598, CI 0.416-0.858) and adjusted (HR 0.55, 95% CI 0.388-0.801) models with no relationship with SBP. In a receiver operating characteristic analysis, a combination of PP > 60 mmHg and SBP > 140 mmHg was associated to a preserved EF with a high performance value. No prognostic significance of PP was found in the HF with mid-range EF subgroup. CONCLUSIONS: In acute HFrEF, there is an almost linear inverse relation between mortality and PP, partly mediated by SBP. In HFpEF, a J-shaped relationship between mortality and PP was present with a better prognosis at the nadir. A combination of PP > 60 mmHg with SBP > 140 mmHg may be clinically helpful as marker of a preserved left ventricular EF.