Incident heart failure and recurrent coronary events following acute myocardial infarction
State Street (United States) · Jackson Memorial Hospital · +9 more institutions
Abstract
A total of 6804 patients with a primary discharge diagnosis of MI at 28 Baylor Scott & White Health hospitals (January 2015 to December 2021) were studied. Patient characteristics, treatment, and outcomes, including incident HF, recurrent MI, all-cause death, and all-cause and cardiovascular rehospitalizations, were assessed. Landmark approach anchored at 3 months post-discharge was used to assess 1-year outcomes.
Median age was 69 years, 59.7% were male, and 76.7% had non-ST-elevation MI. Comorbidities included hypertension (89%), dyslipidaemia (87%), Type 2 diabetes (48%), and chronic kidney disease (34%); 17% had a history of MI and 23% of HF; 63% underwent percutaneous/surgical revascularization. In landmark-anchored 1-year outcomes (N = 6210), 413 (6.7%) patients died, 1730 (27.9%) had all-cause and 735 (11.8%) cardiovascular hospitalizations, 234 (3.8%) had recurrent MI. Of patients without history of HF, 1160 (23.8%) developed incident HF [42.2%, 26.7%, and 31.1% with ejection fraction (EF) 50%, respectively) within 3 months of discharge. Patients who developed HF had higher risk of death and hospitalizations (all P 50% without prevalent HF or HF during index hospitalization, 257 (11.8%) developed HF and 77 (3.5%) recurrent MI within 1 year.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 58.07
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 27
Authors
17- JBJaved ButlerCorresponding
State Street (United States), Jackson Memorial Hospital, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Baylor Scott & White Health
- KHKendall Hammonds
Baylor Scott & White Health
- KMKhawaja M. Talha
State Street (United States), Jackson Memorial Hospital, University of Mississippi Medical Center
- AAAyman Alhamdow
Boehringer Ingelheim (Germany)
- MBMonica Bennett
Baylor Scott & White Health
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Heart failure
- Myocardial infarction
- Ejection fraction
- Internal medicine
- Cardiology
- Revascularization
- Diabetes mellitus
- Good health and well-being