6533b838fe1ef96bd12a516c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

A bio-clinical approach for prediction of sudden cardiac death in outpatients with heart failure: The ST2-SCD score

Pedro MolinerM BoldoCrisanto Diez-quevedoElisabet ZamoraBeatriz GonzálezJosep LupónJavier SantesmasesMar DomingoJaume BarallatGermán CedielAntoni Bayes-genisEvelyn Santiago-vacasMarta De AntonioJulio NúñezJulio NúñezMaria Isabel Troya

subject

Malemedicine.medical_specialty030204 cardiovascular system & hematologySudden deathSudden cardiac deathCohort Studies03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePredictive Value of TestsRisk FactorsInternal medicineAmbulatory CaremedicineHumanscardiovascular diseases030212 general & internal medicineAgedCause of deathAged 80 and overHeart FailureUnivariate analysisEjection fractionTroponin Tbusiness.industryIncidence (epidemiology)Middle Agedmedicine.diseaseDeath Sudden CardiacHeart failureCardiologyFemaleCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessBiomarkersFollow-Up Studies

description

Sudden cardiac death (SCD) is one of the main modes of death in heart failure (HF) patients and its prediction remains a real challenge. Our aim was to assess the incidence of SCD at 5 years HF contemporary managed outpatients, and to find a simple prediction model for SCD.SCD was considered any unexpected death, witnessed or not, occurring in a previously stable patient with no evidence of worsening HF or any other cause of death. A competing risk strategy was adopted using the Fine-Gray method of Cox regressions analyses that considered other causes of death as the competing event.The derivation cohort included 744 consecutive outpatients (72% men, age 67.9 ± 12.2 years, left ventricular ejection fraction [LVEF] 36% ± 14). During follow-up, 312 deaths occurred, 40 SCDs (5.4%). Age, haemoglobin, eGFR, HF duration, high-sensitivity troponin T, NTproBNP, and ST2 were associated with SCD in univariate analyses; HF duration (p = 0.006), eGFR (p  0.001), LVEF45% (p = 0.03), and ST2 (p = 0.006) remained in multivariable analysis. A predictive score (ST2-SCD) including dichotomous variables (ST2  45, LVEF45%, HF duration3 years, eGFR  55, age ≥ 60 years and male sex) provided a Harrell's C-statistic of 0.82 (0.76-0.89)), reaching 0.87 (0.80-0.95) in the validation cohort (n = 149).In contemporary managed HF, SCD occurred in 5.4% of outpatients, accounting for 12.8% of all deaths at 5 years. Of the 3 studied biomarkers, only ST2 remained independently associated with SCD. A model containing age, sex, ST2, eGFR, LVEF, and HF duration reasonably predicted 5-years risk of SCD.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2019.05.046