Predicting Mortality Among Patients Hospitalized for Heart Failure
University Health Network · Women's College Hospital · +1 more institution
Abstract
To identify predictors of mortality and to develop and to validate a model using information available at hospital presentation. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Retrospective study of 4031 community-based patients presenting with heart failure at multiple hospitals in Ontario, Canada (2624 patients in the derivation cohort from 1999-2001 and 1407 patients in the validation cohort from 1997-1999), who had been identified as part of the Enhanced Feedback for Effective Cardiac Treatment (EFFECT) study. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: All-cause 30-day and 1-year mortality.
The mortality rates for the derivation cohort and validation cohort, respectively, were 8.9% and 8.2% in hospital, 10.7% and 10.4% at 30 days, and 32.9% and 30.5% at 1 year. Multivariable predictors of mortality at both 30 days and 1 year included older age, lower systolic blood pressure, higher respiratory rate, higher urea nitrogen level (all P150) had a mortality rate of 59.0% at 30 days and 78.8% at 1 year. Patients with higher 1-year risk scores had reduced survival at all times up to 1 year (log-rank, P
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 22.57
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 50
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Internal medicine
- Heart failure
- Odds ratio
- Cohort
- Retrospective cohort study
- Mortality rate
- Confidence interval
- Good health and well-being