Echocardiographic subtypes of heart failure in consecutive hospitalised patients with dyspnoea

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Echocardiographic subtypes of heart failure in consecutive hospitalised patients with dyspnoea. / Nielsen, Olav Wendelboe; Valeur, Nana; Sajadieh, Ahmad; Fabricius-Bjerre, Andreas; Carlsen, Christian Malchau; Kober, Lars.

In: Open Heart, Vol. 6, No. 1, e000928, 01.06.2019.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Nielsen, OW, Valeur, N, Sajadieh, A, Fabricius-Bjerre, A, Carlsen, CM & Kober, L 2019, 'Echocardiographic subtypes of heart failure in consecutive hospitalised patients with dyspnoea', Open Heart, vol. 6, no. 1, e000928. https://doi.org/10.1136/openhrt-2018-000928

APA

Nielsen, O. W., Valeur, N., Sajadieh, A., Fabricius-Bjerre, A., Carlsen, C. M., & Kober, L. (2019). Echocardiographic subtypes of heart failure in consecutive hospitalised patients with dyspnoea. Open Heart, 6(1), [e000928]. https://doi.org/10.1136/openhrt-2018-000928

Vancouver

Nielsen OW, Valeur N, Sajadieh A, Fabricius-Bjerre A, Carlsen CM, Kober L. Echocardiographic subtypes of heart failure in consecutive hospitalised patients with dyspnoea. Open Heart. 2019 Jun 1;6(1). e000928. https://doi.org/10.1136/openhrt-2018-000928

Author

Nielsen, Olav Wendelboe ; Valeur, Nana ; Sajadieh, Ahmad ; Fabricius-Bjerre, Andreas ; Carlsen, Christian Malchau ; Kober, Lars. / Echocardiographic subtypes of heart failure in consecutive hospitalised patients with dyspnoea. In: Open Heart. 2019 ; Vol. 6, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{93f7af30f4fa46879b3e439d9dab5600,
title = "Echocardiographic subtypes of heart failure in consecutive hospitalised patients with dyspnoea",
abstract = "Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) involves half of hospitalised patients with heart failure (HF), but estimates vary due to unclear diagnostic criteria. We performed a prospective observational study of hospitalised patients admitted with dyspnoea. The aim was to apply contemporary guidelines to diagnose HF due to valvular disease (HFvhd), HF due to reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), HF due to midrange EF (HFmrEF) and HFpEF in relation to presumed cardiac or non-cardiac dyspnoea. Methods We included consecutive hospitalised patients with presumed HF or dyspnoea and excluded patients with acute coronary syndrome, estimated glomerular filtration rate <30 mL/min/1.73 m or low NT-proBNP (<296 ng/L). Higher age-adjusted NT-proBNP values excluded patients with presumptive non-cardiac dyspnoea. Contemporary criteria for HFpEF and diastolic dysfunction were assessed, and we adjudicated whether acute decompensated HF (ADHF) had been the primary diagnosis. Results Of 707 eligible patients, we included 370 patients of whom 75 had non-cardiac dyspnoea. Of these, 10% (38/370) had no cardiac dysfunction. Cardiac dysfunction consisted of 18.4%, HFvhd, 30.1% HFrEF, 10.2% HFmrEF and 41.3% HFpEF. HFpEF was twice as common in presumptive non-cardiac dyspnoea versus cardiac dyspnoea (71% vs 34%, p<0.0001). However, adjudicated ADHF was the primary diagnosis in 80% of HFrEF, 62% of HFmrEF and just 28% of HFpEF. Conclusion HF according to contemporary criteria applied to 90% of patients admitted with dyspnoea and elevated NT-proBNP irrespective of the presumptive cause of dyspnoea, of whom 10% had HFmrEF and 41% HFpEF. However, significant non-cardiac diagnoses related to 9 out of 10 with HFpEF with pulmonary disease as the predominant adjudicated problem.",
keywords = "echocardiography, epidemiology, heart failure with normal ejection fraction, systolic heart failure",
author = "Nielsen, {Olav Wendelboe} and Nana Valeur and Ahmad Sajadieh and Andreas Fabricius-Bjerre and Carlsen, {Christian Malchau} and Lars Kober",
year = "2019",
month = jun,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1136/openhrt-2018-000928",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
journal = "Open Heart",
issn = "2398-595X",
publisher = "BMJ",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Echocardiographic subtypes of heart failure in consecutive hospitalised patients with dyspnoea

AU - Nielsen, Olav Wendelboe

AU - Valeur, Nana

AU - Sajadieh, Ahmad

AU - Fabricius-Bjerre, Andreas

AU - Carlsen, Christian Malchau

AU - Kober, Lars

PY - 2019/6/1

Y1 - 2019/6/1

N2 - Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) involves half of hospitalised patients with heart failure (HF), but estimates vary due to unclear diagnostic criteria. We performed a prospective observational study of hospitalised patients admitted with dyspnoea. The aim was to apply contemporary guidelines to diagnose HF due to valvular disease (HFvhd), HF due to reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), HF due to midrange EF (HFmrEF) and HFpEF in relation to presumed cardiac or non-cardiac dyspnoea. Methods We included consecutive hospitalised patients with presumed HF or dyspnoea and excluded patients with acute coronary syndrome, estimated glomerular filtration rate <30 mL/min/1.73 m or low NT-proBNP (<296 ng/L). Higher age-adjusted NT-proBNP values excluded patients with presumptive non-cardiac dyspnoea. Contemporary criteria for HFpEF and diastolic dysfunction were assessed, and we adjudicated whether acute decompensated HF (ADHF) had been the primary diagnosis. Results Of 707 eligible patients, we included 370 patients of whom 75 had non-cardiac dyspnoea. Of these, 10% (38/370) had no cardiac dysfunction. Cardiac dysfunction consisted of 18.4%, HFvhd, 30.1% HFrEF, 10.2% HFmrEF and 41.3% HFpEF. HFpEF was twice as common in presumptive non-cardiac dyspnoea versus cardiac dyspnoea (71% vs 34%, p<0.0001). However, adjudicated ADHF was the primary diagnosis in 80% of HFrEF, 62% of HFmrEF and just 28% of HFpEF. Conclusion HF according to contemporary criteria applied to 90% of patients admitted with dyspnoea and elevated NT-proBNP irrespective of the presumptive cause of dyspnoea, of whom 10% had HFmrEF and 41% HFpEF. However, significant non-cardiac diagnoses related to 9 out of 10 with HFpEF with pulmonary disease as the predominant adjudicated problem.

AB - Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) involves half of hospitalised patients with heart failure (HF), but estimates vary due to unclear diagnostic criteria. We performed a prospective observational study of hospitalised patients admitted with dyspnoea. The aim was to apply contemporary guidelines to diagnose HF due to valvular disease (HFvhd), HF due to reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), HF due to midrange EF (HFmrEF) and HFpEF in relation to presumed cardiac or non-cardiac dyspnoea. Methods We included consecutive hospitalised patients with presumed HF or dyspnoea and excluded patients with acute coronary syndrome, estimated glomerular filtration rate <30 mL/min/1.73 m or low NT-proBNP (<296 ng/L). Higher age-adjusted NT-proBNP values excluded patients with presumptive non-cardiac dyspnoea. Contemporary criteria for HFpEF and diastolic dysfunction were assessed, and we adjudicated whether acute decompensated HF (ADHF) had been the primary diagnosis. Results Of 707 eligible patients, we included 370 patients of whom 75 had non-cardiac dyspnoea. Of these, 10% (38/370) had no cardiac dysfunction. Cardiac dysfunction consisted of 18.4%, HFvhd, 30.1% HFrEF, 10.2% HFmrEF and 41.3% HFpEF. HFpEF was twice as common in presumptive non-cardiac dyspnoea versus cardiac dyspnoea (71% vs 34%, p<0.0001). However, adjudicated ADHF was the primary diagnosis in 80% of HFrEF, 62% of HFmrEF and just 28% of HFpEF. Conclusion HF according to contemporary criteria applied to 90% of patients admitted with dyspnoea and elevated NT-proBNP irrespective of the presumptive cause of dyspnoea, of whom 10% had HFmrEF and 41% HFpEF. However, significant non-cardiac diagnoses related to 9 out of 10 with HFpEF with pulmonary disease as the predominant adjudicated problem.

KW - echocardiography

KW - epidemiology

KW - heart failure with normal ejection fraction

KW - systolic heart failure

U2 - 10.1136/openhrt-2018-000928

DO - 10.1136/openhrt-2018-000928

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 31297224

AN - SCOPUS:85068015173

VL - 6

JO - Open Heart

JF - Open Heart

SN - 2398-595X

IS - 1

M1 - e000928

ER -

ID: 236318506