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European Heart Journal (2001) 22, 153–164 doi:10.1053/euhj.2000.2175, available online at http://www.idealibrary.com on Clinical events leading to the progression of heart failure: insights from a national database of hospital discharges A. U. Khand1, I. Gemmell2, A. C. Rankin1 and J. G. F. Cleland3 1 Department of Cardiology, Glasgow Royal Infirmary; 2Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow; 3Department of Cardiology, Castle Hill Hospital, University of Hull, Kingston-upon-Hull, U.K. Aims To describe the sequence of clinically apparent events causing readmission and antedating death, subsequent to a first-time hospital admission for heart failure, in order to give insights into the natural history and mechanisms of progression of heart failure. Methods A national database of linked hospital discharge and mortality data for Scotland (population 5·1 million) was used. Patients with a first-time admission to hospital with heart failure in 1992 (index population) were identified and, using a record linkage system, hospital readmissions and their cause according to the hospital physician and deaths were recorded over the subsequent 3 years. A flowchart showing the sequence of events leading to death or recurrent admission was constructed. Results 12 640 patients had first-time admissions with heart failure in 1992; their mean age was 74 years and 46·2% were men. A cohort of 2922 (23%) patients died on their first admission. Among the remaining 9718 patients there were 22 747 readmissions and 4877 deaths over the subsequent 3 years; only 15% had neither event reported. Nine per cent of patients died without any readmission and a further 6% without a further readmission for cardiovascular reasons. A cohort of 5992 (61% of patients at risk) had at least one cardiovascular readmission and half of Introduction Hospitalizations for heart failure are rising in number[1–3] despite recent advances in treatment[4–7]. Ageing of the population, improved primary and secondary preventive measures and an improvement in the Revision submitted 21 March 2000, and accepted 21 March 2000. Correspondence: Professor John G.F. Cleland, MD, FRCP, FACC, FESC, Department of Cardiology, Castle Hill Hospital, University of Hull, Kingston-upon-Hull, HU16 5JQ, U.K. 0195-668X/01/2200153+12 $35.00/0 these had occurred within 6 months. Heart failure without a report of any cardiovascular precipitating event was responsible for 37% (2188 patients) of first cardiovascular readmissions and of these patients approximately 12% had evidence of renal failure or acute respiratory infection as possible triggers for readmission. Acute ischaemic events including myocardial infarction (19%), myocardial infarction alone (8%) and atrial fibrillation (11%) were associated with a substantial number of first readmissions. First readmission precipitated by acute myocardial infarction was associated with a particularly poor prognosis (40% inpatient mortality). Conclusions Recurrent ischaemic events and atrial fibrillation may be the predominant mechanisms leading to exacerbation of and progression of heart failure and death. A substantial proportion of readmissions appear related to heart failure alone. Whether this reflects progressive ventricular remodelling leading to worsening heart failure or other unidentified mechanisms cannot be discerned from this data. (Eur Heart J 2001; 22: 153–164, doi: 10.1053/euhj.2000.2175) 2001 The European Society of Cardiology Key Words: Heart failure, atrial fibrillation, left ventricular remodelling, ischaemic heart disease, epidemiology. prognosis of heart failure itself[8] will conspire to drive prevalence and therefore rates of readmission yet higher. Because of the enormous social, economic and private burden heart failure imposes, it is quite appropriate that a considerable research effort is being undertaken, from the perspectives of both basic and clinical science, in an attempt to understand the mechanisms underlying the progression of heart failure. Over the last decade the concept that left ventricular remodelling, a term used to describe the progressive structural, molecular and functional adaptations of the 2001 The European Society of Cardiology 154 A. U. Khand et al. heart in response to damage, is the key mechanism underlying the progression of heart failure has become popular. This view has developed on the basis of animal experiments[9] as well as observations on several small and a few large cohorts of patients after myocardial infarction[10,11], or with chronic heart failure[12]. However, these studies have also highlighted the possibility that recurrent ischaemic events may lead to repeated hospital admission and sudden or worsening heart failure deaths[13–16]. In relatively small community studies[17,18] arrhythmias are commonly recorded as a precipitating reason for hospital admission which contrasts with the relative rarity of such events in large clinical trials of heart failure[19,20]. Ischaemic insults and supraventricular arrhythmias may be important pathways of heart failure progression: either directly or by contributing to the adverse remodelling process, by precipitating neurohormonal and cytokine activation, the induction of apoptosis, or by other mechanisms[21–23]. The purpose of this report is to identify the sequence and to quantify the contribution of various clinically apparent events to recurrent admission for heart failure and as antecedents of death. To achieve this we used individual patient-linked data from a national database of first-time hospital admissions with heart failure. As approximately 80% of first diagnoses of heart failure in the U.K. occur at hospitalization[24] this approximates to an incident, epidemiologically representative population rather than a clinical trial population. Methods We used data from the Scottish Hospitals In-Patient Statistics (SHIPS) database[25]. An SMR 1 (standardized mortality record) form is generated on patient discharge, and diagnoses causing/precipitating hospital admission are entered on the SMR1 form. International Classification of Disease (ICD) diagnostic codes corresponding to these diagnoses are indexed by the local hospital coding department and the information is then transcribed to the SHIPS database. Hospitalization records for an individual patient are linked allowing a chosen index event to be tracked to previous and subsequent episodes. The data are also linked to statutory death records. The records provide information about age, gender, principal diagnosis and up to five other conditions coded to ICD 9 format for an admission and the principal cause and up to three other causes for death. The accuracy of ICD 9 coding for the principal diagnosis is 90%, and 77% for other diagnostic codes (1994 results)[26]. The system is maintained and controlled by the Information and Statistics Division (ISD) of the Scottish Health Service Common Services Agency. The database was interrogated to identify patients with a first-time admission with heart failure to Scottish hospitals in 1992; this was the last year that allowed linkage for three prospective years at the time of Eur Heart J, Vol. 22, issue 2, January 2001 analysis. The codes used for heart failure were ICD 9 codes 428·0, 428·1, 428·9 and 402·9, which correspond to congestive heart failure, left heart failure, unspecified heart failure and hypertensive heart failure, respectively. Patients who generated more than one SMR1 record during a single hospital admission (for example, because of transfers between departments) were counted as a single admission as this corresponds more closely to the clinical understanding of what constitutes an admission. First-time admissions with heart failure were defined as admissions coded for heart failure without a similar episode coded in the 3 years before the index admission. Previous analyses indicated that <0·1% of patients have admissions coded for heart failure >3 years apart[8]. Cases were censored for readmission or death on the third anniversary of their index event to ensure that all patients were exposed to the same period of risk for events. To describe the likely aetiological causes of heart failure we captured hospital admissions in the 3 years prior to the index admission (1989–1992) (Table 1). We then identified readmissions and deaths, classified as in- or out-of-hospital, over the subsequent 3 years (1992–1995). Previous reports have shown that the record linkage system is accurate in identifying these subsequent events[27]. A flowchart was constructed showing the sequence leading to the next two admissions or death. A hierarchical system was used to classify clinical reasons for readmissions on the flow chart. Possible reasons for readmissions leading to an exacerbation of heart failure were identified from previous publications[17,18,28–31]. Atrial fibrillation/paroxysmal supraventrcular tachycardia, acute stroke, acute ischaemic event, acute myocardial infarction, hypertensive heart disease, renal failure or acute respiratory infection (ICD 9 coding for acute respiratory infection: 460–466 plus 480–90, codes for other diagnoses in Table 1) are common precipitating events for heart failure exacerbations. These diagnostic codes were defined as ‘potential triggering events’. When these diagnoses were coded together with heart failure then it was assumed that the ‘potential triggering events’ had precipitated the readmission for heart failure. All ‘potential triggering events’ were considered co-dominant and therefore a single patient could be counted in a number of diagnostic categories. Readmission was attributed to heart failure in the flow chart only if the former codes were not present. Other diseases of the circulatory system (ICD 9: 390–459, excluding above codes) and readmission for other non-cardiovascular diagnoses (all other codes) represented a third and fourth tier, respectively, in this hierarchy. To capture a ‘fresh’ acute ischaemic event rather than diagnostic codes relating to background ischaemic heart disease, codes for angina pectoris and chest pain (ICD 9 413 and 786·5 codes) were used in the acute ischaemic event box (angina pectoris/chest pain) of the flowchart and codes ICD 9 411 and 414 codes encompassing various mostly non-acute definitions of ischaemic heart disease were excluded. Diagnoses consistent with the Events leading to the progression of HF 155 30 25 Rate per 1000 population 2433 4341 20 15 1953 10 1615 5 996 607 28 0 31 M F < 25 425 211 M F 25–54 M F 55–64 M F 65–74 M F 75+ Figure 1 Incidence rates of first time heart failure hospitalization 1992. Population of Scotland 5·1 million. Numbers above bars represent absolute numbers of patients in any ICD 9 coding position. M=male; F=female; =other position; =first diagnostic position. latter codes are frequently inserted on a heart failure related admission to document the aetiology of heart failure or copied from previous admissions as a background disease, irrespective of the evidence of an acute ischaemic insult. was among women aged d75 years, although rates of admission adjusted for the population at risk were fairly consistently higher in men. The mean age of the population was 74 years and 46·2% were men. 2922 patients (23%) died during admission leaving 9718 at risk of readmission or out-ofhospital death. Results Demography There were 12 640 patients reported with a first admission for heart failure in 1992 (index population) coded in any of the six diagnostic positions (of ICD 9 coding, see methods), of which 5763 (46%) and 4378 (35%) were in the first and second positions, respectively. Of the ICD 9 heart failure codes used, 44% of the index population had code 428·1(left heart failure), 36% had 428·0 (congestive heart failure), 21% had 428·9 (unspecified heart failure) and 1% had 402·9 (hypertensive heart failure), and 2% had two of the above codes. Figure 1 describes the rates for first admissions with heart failure of the index population divided by age, gender and position of ICD 9 heart failure code. The population characteristics for Scotland were obtained from official government publications[32]. Hospitalization rates rose markedly with age. Numerically the largest number of admissions Underlying causes of heart failure and concomitant diagnoses Table 1 shows the range of diagnostic codes prior to, at the time of index admission and on subsequent readmissions. 9970 of the index cohort had at least one admission in the prior 3 years. A code for any form of ischaemic heart disease was recorded in 3551 (36%) of these patients, (>50% of which were acute myocardial infarction codes) and 4662 patients had the IHD code recorded during concomitant admission, (6400 patients in total either previous to or on index admission, see Table 1a). Diseases of the digestive system were the next most frequently reported before index admission. There were 1969 (15·6%) patients with a code for respiratory disease prior to index admission and 2833 patients (22%) had a respiratory disease code as a concomitant diagnosis, one-quarter of the latter were acute respiratory Eur Heart J, Vol. 22, issue 2, January 2001 156 A. U. Khand et al. Table 1 The burden of disease in heart failure Diagnosis (any diagnostic position) Population at risk Total number of events (any cause)‡ Acute myocardial infarction (AMI)§ Angina/chest pain Ischaemic heart disease (IHD) Any IHD (any of above three codes) Atrial fibrillation/paroxysmal SVT Ventricular fibrillation/cardiac arrest Other arrhythmia Hypertensive heart disease Mitral valve disorder Aortic valve disorder Diseases of pulmonary circulation Acute stroke Heart failure Heart failure alone0 Other diseases of circulatory system¶ Diabetes mellitus Renal failure Disease of urinary system Respiratory disease Digestive system Cancer Alcohol dependence/drunkenness Other (excluding above) ICD-9 codes Subsequent admissions* Previous* admission Concomitant diagnosis Subsequent admission* 12 640 9970 1958 1584 1642 3551 730 56 375 12 640 12 640 2039 593 2402 4662 1548 193 229 9718 7381 780 1068 2500 3286 1025 217 327 — 22 747 900 1954 4335 6550 1555 223 397 3·1 1·2 1·8 1·7 2·0 1·5 1·0 1·2 814 443 348 243 502 0 0 943 833 251 1227 1969 3230 1417 207 25 737 325 182 243 297 12 640 5715 801 1022 611 463 2883 928 538 77 0 571 290 212 338 523 3719 2154 789 846 711 809 2276 1708 864 107 462 862 437 310 441 584 6660 3010 1119 2049 1353 1145 4252 2557 1932 179 645 1·5 1·5 1·5 1·3 1·1 1·8 1·4 1·4 2·4 1·9 1·4 1·9 1·5 2·2 1·7 1·4 — — 410 413, 786·5 411, 414 427·0, 427·3 427·4, 427·5 All 427 except above four codes 401–405 394, 424·0 395, 424·1 415–417 436 428, 402·9 428, 402·9 390–459 excl above 250 584–586 580–583, 587–599 480–519 520–579 140–239 303, 305·0 Total number Mean† *Previous and subsequent admission column refers to number of patients admitted at least once whereas subsequent admissions (italics) is number of admissions generated. † mean=column 6/column 5, the median number of readmissions for all diagnostic codes was 1 except for any cause and diabetes mellitus where it was 2. ‡ This row pertains to numbers of events (patients, readmissions or deaths) whereas the rows below this describe the number of codes for respective diagnoses generated in any position. § In previous admissions only the code 412 ‘Old myocardial infarction’ is also included. 0 Heart failure alone was defined as a heart failure code without a concomitant code for the following; AMI, any IHD, stroke, AF, hypertension, aortic and mitral valve disease and diabetes mellitus. ¶ The codes in this category principally relate to other peripheral vascular disease (ICD 9 433), and the rest are a range of conditions such as other cardiovascular disease and transient cerebral ischaemia. infection codes (25%). Prior admissions with cancer and urinary tract problems occurred in 11% and 10% of the index population, respectively. Atrial fibrillation was recorded in 16% of patients either prior to or on the index admission, the equivalent figure for hypertension was 11%. Seven per cent of patients had codes relating to aortic and mitral valve disorders either on the previous or concomitant admission. Of the index population 10·5% had a code for diabetes mellitus before index admission or as a concomitant diagnosis (Table 1a). Overall, 5715 patients had no concomitant code for known aetiological conditions for heart failure on index admission (any code for ischaemic heart disease, hypertension, atrial fibrillation/paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia, valvular heart disease, diabetes mellitus) and 4071 of these patients did not generate any of the above codes in the previous 3 years either, suggesting Eur Heart J, Vol. 22, issue 2, January 2001 approximately 32% of the index population had an unknown aetiology for heart failure. Cumulative diagnostic coding By looking at the cumulative frequency of diagnostic codes we sought to differentiate between conditions leading up to heart failure from complications developing as a consequence of heart failure and potentially contributing to its progression. Table 1a shows the cumulative frequency of the diagnosis so that the right hand column reflects a diagnosis recorded at any time between 1989–95 for that number of patients. The percentage in the table is a percentage of 12 640 (index admission population) and, therefore, the magnitude of each event as well as the principal time period in which it occurred is given. In Fig. 2 the total number of Events leading to the progression of HF Table 1a 157 The burden of disease in heart failure (cumulative percentages) Diagnosis (any diagnostic position) Population at risk Acute myocardial infarction (AMI) Angina/chest pain Ischaemic heart disease (IHD) Any IHD (any of above three codes) Atrial fibrillation Ventricular fibrillation Other arrhythmia Hypertensive heart disease Mitral valve disorder Aortic valve disorder Diseases of pulmonary circulation Acute stroke Heart failure Heart failure alone Other diseases of circulatory system Diabetes mellitus Renal failure Disease of urinary system Respiratory disease Digestive system Cancer Alcohol dependence/drunkenness Previous admission % of index population Concomitant or previous admission Cumulative % Subsequent, previous or concomitant admission Cumulative % 9970 2037 1584 1642 3551 730 56 283 814 443 348 243 502 0 — 926 833 251 1227 1969 3230 1417 207 79·0 16·1 12·5 13·0 28·0 5·8 0·2 2·2 6·4 3·5 2·7 1·9 4·0 0 — 7·3 6·4 2·0 9·7 15·6 25·5 11·2 1·6 12 640 3725 1972 3458 6400 2039 193 533 1390 528 394 454 744 12 640 5715 2977 1331 765 1591 3860 3735 1657 268 100·0 29·5 15·6 27·4 50·6 16·1 1·5 4·2 11·0 4·1 3·1 3·6 5·9 100·0 45·2 23·5 10·5 6·1 12·6 30·5 29·5 13·1 2·1 12640 4096 2590 4845 7350 2552 399 802 1683 681 516 727 1192 12 640 6646 3839 1555 1305 2153 4915 4686 2167 331 — 32·4 20·5 38·3 58·1 20·2 3·1 6·3 13·3 5·4 4·1 5·7 9·4 100·0 52·6 30·4 12·3 10·3 17·0 38·9 37·1 17·1 2·6 See Table 1 for codes. 100 80 % 60 40 20 0 Diabetes Hyper AMI IHD Resp AF Stroke Renal Diagnoses Figure 2 Temporal trends in first mention of cardiovascular codes in relation to first heart failure hospitalization 1992. Hyper=hypertension; AMI=acute myocardial infarction; IHD=ischaemic heart disease; Resp=respiratory disease; AF=atrial fibrillation; =subsequent; =concomitant; =previous. Eur Heart J, Vol. 22, issue 2, January 2001 158 A. U. Khand et al. Table 1b Cardiovascular (CVS) readmissions and 3-year mortality according to concomitant or previous diagnosis Diagnosis (any diagnostic position) Previous or concomitant admission Survivors of index admission % with CVS readmission* Total number of CVS readmission Days in hospital with CVS readmission† 3-year mortality‡ (%) 12 640 3725 4334 2309 1390 744 1331 765 3860 9718 2923 3713 1812 1250 481 1227 449 3004 60·5 65·1 68·1 63·4 66·5 65·7 70·9 65·9 61·5 12 316·0 4654 5926 2451 1978 714 1943 661 3987 18 15 17 20 18 22 21 22 20 50·2 48·4 49·9 54·1 47·1 62·4 56·3 68·1 59·3 All categories Acute myocardial infarction Angina/chest pain/IHD§ Atrial fibrillation Hypertensive heart disease Acute stroke Diabetes mellitus Renal failure Respiratory disease * % of index admission survivors admitted at least once with a cardiovascular readmission.† Median number of days spent in hospital per patient (i.e. combining all episodes for each patient). ‡ Excluding deaths on index admission. §411, 413, 786·5: all codes denoting any diagnosis of ischaemic heart disease (IHD) except AMI. 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 ok e st r cu te A er t yp H en a lf ai en si o n lu re A M I D ia R m el an be te s e ig D lit us ce r F C sy A st em e se as es tiv y at or ir es p R H ea r A tf ai ny lu IH re di al co D fa rt ea H on e de ilu re 0 Figure 3 Subsequent admission rates per thousand population at risk. Most frequent admissions in descending order. See text for abbreviations and Table 1 for diagnostic codes; AMI is a subset of any IHD. Population at risk 9718 (index admission survivors). =number of admissions; =patient admissions. patients having been coded for the listed events anytime between 1989–95 is defined as 100%. The 100% is subdivided in the multi-column bar chart according to the proportions of patients at each specified time period. A diagnosis of ischaemic heart disease was recorded at some time (1989–95) in 7350 (58%) patients (excluding codes for death) and in the great majority of these cases (50·6%) this was prior to or on the index admission. The pattern of recording of these events is as might be expected with conditions such as hypertension, diabetes and ischaemic heart disease generally antedating the onset of heart failure, atrial fibrillation and respiratory Eur Heart J, Vol. 22, issue 2, January 2001 disease occurring prior to or concomitant with a diagnosis of heart failure while stroke and renal failure occurred after the onset of heart failure in a large percentage of patients. Readmissions 1992–1995 Figure 3 shows the number of patients readmitted and the total number of readmissions according to diagnostic discharge codes, per thousand population at risk (i.e. excluding deaths on the index admission). Table 1b, by Events leading to the progression of HF contrast, categorizes the index population according to concomitant or previous codes for heart failure associated diagnoses and describes the percentage of index admission survivors with cardiovascular admissions (1992–95), median length of stay per admission and the respective 3-year mortality for these cohorts, excluding deaths on index admission. The mean number of readmissions for survivors of the index admission was 3·1 (range 0–23). 1485 patients survived without any readmission and 2231 without a cardiovascular readmission over 3 years. Heart failure was the most common coding for readmission. 3719 patients had 6660 readmissions for heart failure (mean of 1·8 admissions/patient) over 3 years and these constituted 29% of the total number of admissions. Readmission for heart failure was particularly high in the early post-discharge period, 16% of index admission survivors were readmitted with heart failure within 90 days of discharge. Approximately 21% of heart failure readmissions were associated with a concomitant code for acute myocardial infarction, an acute ischaemic event (chest pain/angina pectoris) or atrial fibrillation/paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia. Ischaemic heart disease codes, as a group, were the second most frequent coded reason for readmission (6550 admissions in 3286 patients). Acute ischaemic event codes (acute myocardial infarction and chest pain/ angina pectoris) constituted almost 50% of the codes. Non-cardiovascular diagnostic codes, such as respiratory disease and diseases of the digestive system figured frequently as a cause of readmission (Fig. 3). Survivors of the index admission who had diabetes mellitus, any ischaemic heart disease code, atrial fibrillation, hypertensive heart disease or renal failure coded either in the index or a previous admission had a significantly higher rate of cardiovascular readmission compared with the index admission survivors as a whole. Those with previous or concomitant renal failure, diabetes mellitus, acute stroke, respiratory disease or atrial fibrillation codes suffered a significantly greater mortality. Acute stroke patient subsets had significantly longer lengths of stay in hospital (Table 1b). Death Three-year mortality for the index population (Table 2) was 62% (7799 deaths), 52% for those <75 years and 70% for those d75 years (P<0·001 for age difference). Of these, 2922 deaths occurred on the index admission, 867 patients died after the index admission but before readmission and 535 patients died subsequent to only non-cardiovascular readmissions. Of the index admission survivors, 4877 (50%) subsequently died over 3 years and 2087 (43%) of these deaths occurred out of hospital. The median (IQR) time to death during index admission was 9 days (2–25) and that for discharge to out of hospital death without subsequent readmission was 100 days (18–345), 46% of these deaths occurring within 90 days of discharge. 159 Figure 4 illustrates time from discharge from last hospital admission to death for all the 2087 deaths occurring out of hospital. The risk of death was highest early after hospital discharge, 25% of all out of hospital deaths had occurred by 16 days after last hospital discharge. Age, gender or cause of last admission did not explain the skewing the incidence of death towards an early post-discharge period. Sequence of events Figure 5 describes the coded reasons for next hospitalization after index admission (according to the criteria in the methods section). Second hospitalizations are also shown for larger cohorts. Of the total at risk, 6093 patients (63%) had at least one cardiovascular readmission or admission with acute respiratory infection or renal failure. Of these patients an acute ischaemic event code (defined as code for chest pain or angina pectoris) was reported in 656 patients (7% of patients at risk), 61 (9%) of whom subsequently died on or after discharge without readmission. A further acute ischaemic event was also the commonest reason for readmission in this subset of patients. Heart failure readmission in the absence of a clinical trigger (concomitant first rank codes excluded) accounted for only 15·7% of second readmissions in this subgroup. The number of patients with acute myocardial infarction causing first cardiovascular readmission is also shown, nearly 50% patients in this cohort died during admission or subsequent to discharge without a second readmission. Atrial fibrillation was reported at the time of first cardiovascular readmission in 680 patients, in 307 (45%) cases this was the first report of atrial fibrillation. The vast majority of this subgroup had code 427·3, atrial fibrillation (97·5%) compared to only 2·5% for paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia. These patients had a better prognosis during and after readmission; only 20% died during or subsequent to a first cardiovascular readmission compared with 30% during or subsequent to all first cardiovascular readmissions (P<0.001). However, the next admission in this cohort was associated with stroke in 5% of the patients at risk of an event (survivors of first readmission with atrial fibrillation code). Heart failure without any reported triggering event (no concomitant first rank code) was coded as the reason for first cardiovascular readmission in 1931 patients (20% of patients at risk), 575 of whom died during admission or prior to a further readmission. 205 of the surviving patients (13% of at risk population) were subsequently readmitted with an acute ischaemic event, acute myocardial infarction or atrial fibrillation and 522 (33% of at risk population) with heart failure in the absence of a potential triggering event. Renal failure was reported in 6·2% (380 patients) of all first readmissions (cardiovascular, renal failure or respiratory infection codes) and of these admissions heart Eur Heart J, Vol. 22, issue 2, January 2001 160 A. U. Khand et al. Table 2 Death: out of hospital and during cardiovascular readmission Population Patients at risk Numbers with event (n) Median times to event* (IQ range) days 12 640 — 9718 9718 6048 4915 4915 3057 2922 9718 867 6048 1131 631 3057 526 9 (2, 25) — 100 (18, 345) 150 (53, 400) 8 (2, 23) 123 (35, 332) 92 (29, 252) 10 (3, 25) 9718 9718 2790 2087 325 (124, 631) 296 (77, 635) Deaths during index admission Survivors of index admission Deaths subsequent to discharge but without readmission First cardiovascular readmission Deaths during 1st cardiovascular readmissions Deaths after 1st cardiovascular readmission but without readmission Second Cardiovascular readmission Deaths during second cardiovascular readmission Deaths during readmission over 3 years Deaths out of hospital over 3 years * Median times for deaths during readmission are calculated from admission date, whereas for out-of-hospital deaths median time refer to time to death from discharge of preceding admission. Deaths over 3 years (last two rows) are from index admission discharge. 2500 Number of deaths 2000 1500 1000 500 0 1 3 2 Time to death from discharge from last admission (years) Figure 4 Time to death from last admission for out of hospital deaths. failure was the sole cardiovascular code in 149 patients (39%). The equivalent figures for acute respiratory infection was 6·5% (399 patients) of first readmissions and 112 (28%) of these patients had heart failure as a sole cardiovascular code. The most frequent diagnoses for second readmissions were heart failure in the absence of a concomitant potential triggering event code (933 patients), an acute ischaemic event or acute myocardial infarction (540) and atrial fibrillation (361). Discussion The present study identifies key clinical events associated with readmission or antedating death from a large database of first-time admissions with heart failure. The Eur Heart J, Vol. 22, issue 2, January 2001 relative magnitude and sequence of these events provides an insight into the clinical progression of heart failure. Among the 9718 patients who survived the index admission there were 22 747 readmissions and 4877 (50%) deaths over the following 3 years. Ischaemic heart disease was the dominant cause of heart failure and 16% (n=2039) of first admissions with heart failure were associated with acute myocardial infarction and a further 13% had had an admission for acute myocardial infarction within the past 3 years (Table 1a). The single most common triggering event for first and subsequent readmissions was an acute ischaemic event or a myocardial infarct (Fig. 5). Once a patient had been admitted with an acute ischaemic event this remained the dominant reason for readmission. This is despite restricting codes for acute ischaemic events to chest pain/angina AMI 496 D 25 Angina/ chest pain* 656 D 77 D 61 AF 680 HF 74 AMI CVA Ang 14 33 24 Hypertension 341 AMI CVA Ang H AF Resp Renal 36 164 28 23 14 24 12 Resp Renal HF 8 10 68 Acute stroke 301 Renal 380 D 123 AMI CVA Ang 45 31 75 H AF Resp Renal HF 18 167 14 24 80 Resp 399 Heart failure admission 12 640 Death 535 D 164 HF 522 Ang H AF Resp Renal HF 66 40 51 44 26 142 Other cardiovascular disease 1327 H AF Resp Renal 30 85 65 68 AMI CVA 24 29 D 123 D 345 Heart failure 1931 Other diagnosis 1273 No admission and no death in 3 years 1485 Figure 5 The sequence of events after first hospital admission with Heart Failure 1992. See text for description, Table 1 for codes of diagnostic categories (acute respiratory infection: ICD 9 codes: 450–466 plus 480–90, subset of respiratory disease). The diagnosis and below this the number of codes with this event are illustrated in each box. The solid bars in first readmission separate codes with equal dominance from those with lesser dominance, the same hierarchy exists for 2nd readmissions. The hierarchy of codes is from left to right. For 1st readmission, deaths during readmission are slightly below event boxes and deaths after discharge but without readmission are slightly above 2nd event rows. *denotes acute ischaemic event. AMI: acute myocardial infarction, CVA: Acute Cerebrovascular Accident, Ang: angina/chest pain (acute ischaemic event), H: Hypertension, AF: Atrial Fibrillation/paroxysmal SVT, Resp: Acute Respiratory infection, Renl: Renal Failure, HF: Heart Failure, D: Death. D 36 AMI CVA Ang H AF 43 8 27 11 29 D 35 2nd Readmission D 197 Potential triggering factors 1st Readmission Death 867 Death on index 2922 Events leading to the progression of HF 161 Eur Heart J, Vol. 22, issue 2, January 2001 162 A. U. Khand et al. pectoris. Whilst this may underestimate the contribution of acute ischaemic episodes to first readmissions it is likely to represent a truer picture compared to including ICD 9 codes 411 and 414 codes as well as other acute and subacute forms of ischaemic heart disease and other forms of chronic ischaemic heart disease. The latter codes would largely represent background ischaemic heart disease rather than a fresh event. (When incorporating all four ischaemic heart disease codes, first readmission increased to 2597 patients, as defined in the flowchart). Although we cannot similarly differentiate acute hypertensive crisis precipitating admission from background or ‘burnt out’ hypertension in the flowchart the potential contribution of hypertension to precipitating readmission is far less in magnitude. Those patients who were hospitalized with acute myocardial infarction, subsequent to first heart failure admission, had a particularly poor prognosis, as has been noted by others[13,14]. Atrial fibrillation contributed to a smaller but still significant proportion (11%) of first readmissions (potential triggering event codes, heart failure and other cardiovascular disease). It is unclear what role atrial fibrillation played in precipitating readmission, but 45% of these patients had no previous report of atrial fibrillation. Preliminary reports of patients from clinical trials suggest that atrial fibrillation is associated with <5% of first readmissions[20]. However, in some case series of hospital admissions the proportion of patients with atrial fibrillation acting as a trigger for heart failure exacerbation is in the order of 20%[17,28]. The true figure is likely to be closer to the latter studies, as atrial fibrillation is undercoded (unpublished data) and therefore likely to be underestimated in this study, perhaps because it may be seen, by some, as a condition of secondary importance to a major diagnosis such as heart failure. However, atrial fibrillation may be the principal reason for heart failure deterioration either by causing a tachycardiomyopathy[33] or because the stress of tachycardia and loss of atrioventricular synchrony reveals underlying disease. The prognosis of first cardiovascular readmissions with atrial fibrillation was better than the overall population suggesting, perhaps, that many patients did not have major underlying left ventricular systolic dysfunction and that heart failure may have resolved with control of the arrhythmia. Others have noted that atrial fibrillation confers a worse prognosis among patients with heart failure[34,35] although this has not been consistent across studies. We cannot be certain from our data-set what proportion of patients had acute onset or paroxysmal atrial fibrillation compared with those with chronic atrial fibrillation. However, atrial fibrillation was associated with an increased risk of stroke: 10% of patients with either a previous or concomitant code for atrial fibrillation suffered an acute stroke over 3 years compared with 6% for the whole index population. Concomitant codes for heart failure were listed in first readmissions in 20–50% of all patients with a potential triggering event code, mainly in the first or second Eur Heart J, Vol. 22, issue 2, January 2001 coding position, suggesting a high rate of clinically overt heart failure deterioration. Although acute ischaemic events and atrial fibrillation may be the most important clinical events contributing to the progression of heart failure, in a substantial proportion of first readmissions (31%) (Fig. 5) heart failure was coded in the absence of potential triggering events. These cases may truly reflect the contribution of progressive ventricular remodelling. However, even in this subset, almost a quarter of second readmissions were reported to have an acute ischaemic or arrhythmic triggering event (Fig. 5). Death The mortality in this cohort of patients is considerably worse than that reported from clinical trials in patients with chronic, stable heart failure but very similar to that reported in epidemiological studies of incident heart failure[5,6,8,36,37]. Although available to us (both inpatient and out of hospital) we did not incorporate codes for death in this analysis. There is considerable evidence that the cause of death recorded on death certificates is unreliable (in comparison, hospital discharge coding appears relatively reliable)[38,39]. Furthermore, in Scotland, as in other countries, reporting death as sudden or due to heart failure on death certificates is discouraged and such deaths are frequently reported, without supporting evidence, such as myocardial infarction[40,41]. This is consistent with this dataset; 41% of outpatient deaths had a primary code for acute myocardial infarction compared with 21% for inpatient deaths. A substantial proportion of deaths occurred out of hospital (27% of all deaths) with an especially high-risk of death shortly after last hospital discharge. Most of these are likely to fulfil common definitions of sudden death[16,42]. However, death in these patients may not be primarily arrhythmic[43]. Preliminary results from the ATLAS trial[44] reveal that myocardial ischaemia is indeed a frequent trigger for sudden death in heart failure both in the presence and absence of documented ischaemic heart disease. The high risk of out of hospital death so soon after discharge suggests that better risk stratification for sudden death is needed, as is further research into triggers and mechanisms of death in heart failure. Non-cardiovascular disease Another insight from the present study is the contribution that non-cardiovascular morbidity makes to admissions or death. Gastro-intestinal and respiratory disease and cancer made a significant overall contribution to readmissions (Fig. 3, Table 1). Renal failure and acute respiratory infection triggered a substantial minority of first readmissions (Fig. 5) suggesting Events leading to the progression of HF non-cardiovascular disease may also drive the progression of heart failure. Improved treatment of acute heart failure may prevent the development of secondary organ dysfunction such as renal failure[45] (Fig. 2), which is associated with a particularly poor prognosis. There is also some evidence to suggest that angiotensinconverting enzyme inhibitors can reduce the risk of respiratory infection[46]. Diabetes mellitus could be responsible, in part, for rising hospital admissions with heart failure in the future[47]. Treating heart failure well may make these other conditions more tolerable, but these problems will often require treatment in their own right. 163 that we may need new strategies to reduce readmissions in patients with heart failure. Some Class III antiarrhythmic agents[54–57] help to maintain patients with heart failure in sinus rhythm; much more research into effective strategies for the prevention and management of atrial fibrillation are required. Unfortunately patients with heart failure are usually excluded from trials of agents investigating coronary events. Only now are trials of antithrombotic agents[58] and statins being set up in patients with heart failure to evaluate their risks and benefits. We thank the staff of the Information and Statistics Division of the Scottish Health Services Agency for providing the data. We would also like to thank Mrs Elaine Clark for her help with the text and Morag Shaw for her help with the illustration. Previous literature Preliminary reports from cohorts of patients with heart failure selected for inclusion in randomized controlled trials suggest that ischaemic events account for about 10% of readmissions and that arrhythmias make a much smaller contribution[19]. However these populations have generally been younger, with chronic (>90 days) stable heart failure and with left ventricular systolic dysfunction and may have under-reported triggering events for worsening heart failure or death. Observational cohorts analysing precipitating factors for heart failure readmission have described inconsistent results. The variability between case series is probably due to a narrow patient population; single secondary[17,48] or tertiary centre hospital settings[28], analysis of certain age groups[49] or NYHA classes[28], and exclusion of first-time admissions with heart failure[17,48] and also the effect of racial group is likely to have influenced results in some studies[17]. Implications for treatment ACE inhibitors, beta-blockers and spironolactone have been shown to reduce recurrent hospitalization and mortality in patients with heart failure, yet the mechanism of their benefit remains elusive[4,5]. Each can probably affect ventricular remodelling favourably, but ACE inhibitors[13,15,50], beta-blockers[6,51,52] and spironolactone[53] probably also reduce reinfarction and/or arrhythmias and these could be their dominant mechanisms of benefit. Whilst these data cast doubt on ventricular remodelling as the sole factor driving the progression of heart failure this does not necessarily diminish its significance. Ventricular remodelling, myocardial ischaemia and arrhythmias may represent different aspects of a ‘vicious matrix’ in heart failure. Progressive ventricular remodelling could precipitate arrhythmias, including atrial fibrillation, and myocardial ischaemic syndromes could contribute to remodelling and tachyarrhythmias. 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