Heart Failure Specialist Care and long-term outcomes for patients admitted with acute heart failure

Antonio Cannata, Mehrdad A. Mizani, Daniel I Bromage, Susan E Piper, Suzanna M.C Hardman, Cathie Sudlow, Mark de Belder, Paul A. Scott, John Deanfield, Roy S Gardner, Andrew L Clark, John G.F. Cleland, Theresa A. McDonagh, CVD-COVID-UK/COVID-IMPACT Consortium

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background
For patients with acute heart failure (HF), specialist HF care during admission improves diagnosis and treatments.
Objectives
The authors aimed to investigate the association of HF specialist care with in-hospital and longer term prognosis.
Methods
The authors used data from the National Heart Failure Audit from January 1, 2018, to December 31, 2022, linked to electronic records for hospitalization and deaths. All-cause mortality was the primary outcome measure and in-hospital mortality the secondary outcome measure.
Results
Data for 227,170 patients admitted to hospital with HF (median age: 81 years; IQR: 72-88 years), were analyzed. Approximately 80% of acute HF admissions received support from HF specialists. Thirty-nine percent of patients (n = 70,720) were seen by a multidisciplinary team (HF physicians and heart failure specialist nurses [HFSNs]), 22% (n = 40,330) were seen by HFSNs alone, and the remaining 39% (n = 71,700) were seen exclusively by specialist HF physicians. At discharge, more patients who received HF specialist care were prescribed medical therapy for HF and had specialized follow-up. Conversely, diuretic agents were prescribed to fewer patients. HF specialist care was independently associated with a higher rate of prescribing HF therapies at discharge and a lower likelihood of receiving diuretic therapy (OR: 0.90 [95% CI: 0.86-0.95]; P < 0.001). HF specialist care was associated with better long-term survival (HR: 0.89 [95% CI: 0.87-0.90]; P < 0.001) and lower in-hospital mortality (OR: 0.92 [95% CI: 0.0.88-0.97]; P < 0.001).
Conclusions
Receiving HF specialist care during admission for HF is associated with a higher rate of implementation of medical therapy, fewer discharges on diuretic therapy, and lower in-hospital and long-term mortality across the left ventricular ejection fraction spectrum, especially for patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)402-413
Number of pages12
JournalJACC: Heart Failure
Volume13
Issue number3
Early online date7 Aug 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Mar 2025

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