Publication:
Prognostic Significance of the PROFUND Index on One Year Mortality in Acute Heart Failure: Results from the RICA Registry.

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Date

2022-03-25

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Mendez-Bailon, Manuel
Iguaran-Bermudez, Rosario
Formiga-Perez, Francesc
Arevalo Lorido, Jose Carlos
Suarez-Pedreira, Ivan
Morales-Rull, Jose Luis
Serrado-Iglesias, Ana
Llacer-Iborra, Pau
Ormaechea-Gorricho, Gabriela
Carrasco-Sanchez, Francisco Javier

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Background: Heart failure (HF) is a syndrome with high prevalence, mainly affecting elderly patients, where the presence of associated comorbidities is of great importance. Methods: An observational study from a prospective registry was conducted. Patients identified from the National Registry of Heart Failure (RICA), which belongs to the Working Group on Heart Failure and Atrial Fibrillation of the Spanish Society of Internal Medicine (SEMI), were included. The latter is a prospective, multicenter registry that has been active since 2008. It includes individual consecutive patients over 50 years of age with a diagnosis of HF at hospital discharge (acute decompensated or new-onset HF). Results: In total, 5424 patients were identified from the registry. Forty-seven percent were men and mean left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) was 51.4%; 1132 had a score of 0 to 2 according to the PROFUND index, 3087 had a score of 3 to 6, and 952 patients had a score of 7 to 10 points. In the sample, 252 patients had a score above 11 points. At the end of the year of follow-up, 61% of the patients died. This mortality increased proportionally as the PROFUND index increased, specifically 75% for patients with PROFUND greater than 11. The Kaplan-Meier survival curve shows that survival at one year progressively decreases as the PROFUND index value increases. Thus, subjects with scores greater than seven (intermediate-high and high-risk) presented the worst survival with a log rank of 0.96 and a p< 0.05. In the regression analysis, we found a higher risk of death from any cause at one year in the group with the highest risk according to the PROFUND index (score greater than 11 points (HR 1.838 (1.410–2.396)). Conclusions: The PROFUND index is a good index for predicting mortality in patients admitted for acute HF, especially in those subjects at intermediate to high risk with scores above seven. Future studies should seek to determine whether the PROFUND index score is simply a prognostic marker or whether it can also be used to make therapeutic decisions for those subjects with very high short-term mortality.

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MeSH Terms

Patient discharge
Stroke volume
Atrial fibrillation
Prognosis
Follow-up studies
Ventricular function, left
Hospitals

DeCS Terms

Alta del paciente
Estudios de seguimiento
Fibrilación atrial
Función ventricular izquierda
Hospitales
Pronóstico
Volumen sistólico

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Keywords

PROFUND index, comorbidities, heart failure

Citation

Méndez-Bailon M, Iguarán-Bermudez R, Formiga-Pérez F, Arévalo Lorido JC, Suárez-Pedreira I, Morales-Rull JL, et al. Prognostic Significance of the PROFUND Index on One Year Mortality in Acute Heart Failure: Results from the RICA Registry. J Clin Med. 2022 Mar 28;11(7):1876