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Coronary angiography in worsening heart failure: determinants, findings and prognostic implications.

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posted on 2017-12-08, 15:52 authored by João Pedro Ferreira, Patrick Rossignol, Biniyam Demissei, Abhinav Sharma, Nicolas Girerd, Stefan D. Anker, John G. Cleland, Kenneth Dickstein, Gerasimos Filippatos, Hans L. Hillege, Chim C. Lang, Marco Metra, Leong L. Ng, Piotr Ponikowski, Nilesh J. Samani, Dirk J. van Veldhuisen, Aeilko H. Zwinderman, Adriaan Voors, Faiez Zannad
OBJECTIVES: Coronary angiography is regularly performed in patients with worsening signs and/or symptoms of heart failure (HF). However, little is known on the determinants, findings and associated clinical outcomes of coronary angiography performed in patients with worsening HF. METHODS: The BIOSTAT-CHF (a systems BIOlogy Study to TAilored Treatment in Chronic Heart Failure) programme enrolled 2516 patients with worsening symptoms and/or signs of HF, either hospitalised or in the outpatient setting. All patients were included in the present analysis. RESULTS: Of the 2516 patients included, 315 (12.5%) underwent coronary angiography within the 30 days after the onset of worsening symptoms and/or signs of HF. Subjects who underwent angiography were more often observed as inpatients, had more often an overt acute coronary syndrome, had higher troponin I levels, were younger and had better renal function (all p≤0.01). Patients who underwent coronary angiography had a lower risk of the primary outcome of death and/or HF hospitalisation (adjusted HR=0.71, 95% CI 0.57 to 0.89, p=0.003) and death (adjusted HR=0.59, 95% CI 0.43 to 0.80, p=0.001). Among the patients who underwent coronary angiography, those with a coronary stenosis (39%) had a worse prognosis than those without stenosis (adjusted HR for the primary outcome=1.71, 95% CI 1.10 to 2.64, p=0.016). CONCLUSIONS: Coronary angiography was performed in <13% of patients with symptoms and/or signs of worsening HF. These patients were remarkably different from those who did not undergo coronary angiography and had a lower risk of subsequent events. The presence of coronary stenosis on coronary angiography was associated with a worse prognosis.

Funding

This project was funded by a grant from the European Commission (FP7-242209-BIOSTAT-CHF; EudraCT 2010-020808-29).

History

Citation

Heart, 2017

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/School of Medicine/Department of Cardiovascular Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Heart

Publisher

BMJ Publishing Group with British Cardiovascular Society

issn

1355-6037

eissn

1468-201X

Acceptance date

2017-07-21

Copyright date

2017

Available date

2017-12-08

Publisher version

http://heart.bmj.com/content/early/2017/08/10/heartjnl-2017-311750

Language

en

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