Initiation of Medical Therapy for Heart Failure Patients According to Kidney Function: A Danish Nationwide Study

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Initiation of Medical Therapy for Heart Failure Patients According to Kidney Function : A Danish Nationwide Study. / Anjum, Deewa Zahir; Strange, Jarl Emanuel; Fosbøl, Emil; Garred, Caroline Hartwell; Malik, Mariam Elmegaard; Andersson, Charlotte; Jhund, Pardeep S.; McMurray, John J.V.; Petrie, Mark C.; Kober, Lars; Schou, Morten.

I: Clinical Epidemiology, Bind 15, 2023, s. 855-866.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Anjum, DZ, Strange, JE, Fosbøl, E, Garred, CH, Malik, ME, Andersson, C, Jhund, PS, McMurray, JJV, Petrie, MC, Kober, L & Schou, M 2023, 'Initiation of Medical Therapy for Heart Failure Patients According to Kidney Function: A Danish Nationwide Study', Clinical Epidemiology, bind 15, s. 855-866. https://doi.org/10.2147/CLEP.S412787

APA

Anjum, D. Z., Strange, J. E., Fosbøl, E., Garred, C. H., Malik, M. E., Andersson, C., Jhund, P. S., McMurray, J. J. V., Petrie, M. C., Kober, L., & Schou, M. (2023). Initiation of Medical Therapy for Heart Failure Patients According to Kidney Function: A Danish Nationwide Study. Clinical Epidemiology, 15, 855-866. https://doi.org/10.2147/CLEP.S412787

Vancouver

Anjum DZ, Strange JE, Fosbøl E, Garred CH, Malik ME, Andersson C o.a. Initiation of Medical Therapy for Heart Failure Patients According to Kidney Function: A Danish Nationwide Study. Clinical Epidemiology. 2023;15:855-866. https://doi.org/10.2147/CLEP.S412787

Author

Anjum, Deewa Zahir ; Strange, Jarl Emanuel ; Fosbøl, Emil ; Garred, Caroline Hartwell ; Malik, Mariam Elmegaard ; Andersson, Charlotte ; Jhund, Pardeep S. ; McMurray, John J.V. ; Petrie, Mark C. ; Kober, Lars ; Schou, Morten. / Initiation of Medical Therapy for Heart Failure Patients According to Kidney Function : A Danish Nationwide Study. I: Clinical Epidemiology. 2023 ; Bind 15. s. 855-866.

Bibtex

@article{92b6c3834019474b9150ed479538abbc,
title = "Initiation of Medical Therapy for Heart Failure Patients According to Kidney Function: A Danish Nationwide Study",
abstract = "Background: Use of medical therapies for heart failure (HF) patients with moderate kidney dysfunction is low. We hypothesized that lack of initiation of HF therapy reflects the clinicians{\textquoteright} reluctance in very elderly and frail patients more than kidney dysfunction itself. Methods: HF patients were identified from nationwide registers between 2014 and 2021. Information was obtained on eGFR, frailty status, and prescription of HF therapy. Patients were divided into three groups: normal kidney function (eGFR ≥ 60); moderate kidney dysfunction (GFR between 30 and 59); and severe kidney dysfunction (GFR < 30). Multivariate Cox models were used to study the association of eGFR, age, and frailty with use of HF therapy. Results: Of the 42,320 HF patients included those with lower eGFR were significantly older and frailer (median age 74.3 years and 37.8% frail). The crude initiation rate of all three drug classes decreased with decreasing eGFR in a stepwise fashion. After adjusting for age and frailty status, initiation of MRA decreased with decreasing kidney function (moderate kidney function HR 0.80(95% CI 0.77–0.84) and severe kidney function HR 0.24(0.21–0.27)). After adjusting for age and frailty status, initiation of RAS inhibitor and BB was not significantly lower for moderate kidney dysfunction (HR 0.97(0.93–1.02), and HR 1.06(0.97–1.16, respectively)). Initiation of RAS inhibitor was significantly lower for patients with severe kidney dysfunction, HR 0.45(0.41–0.50), but not for BB initiation HR 1.09(1.05–1.14). Conclusion: In a real-world HF cohort, patients with moderate and severe kidney dysfunction were associated with reduced use of MRA irrespective of age and frailty. Reduced use of RASi was associated with severe kidney dysfunction, whereas for patients with moderate kidney dysfunction, reduced use was mainly driven by aging and frailty. Reduced use of BB seemed to be primarily explained by aging and frailty.",
keywords = "chronic kidney disease, epidemiology, guideline-directed medical therapy, heart failure, real-world data",
author = "Anjum, {Deewa Zahir} and Strange, {Jarl Emanuel} and Emil Fosb{\o}l and Garred, {Caroline Hartwell} and Malik, {Mariam Elmegaard} and Charlotte Andersson and Jhund, {Pardeep S.} and McMurray, {John J.V.} and Petrie, {Mark C.} and Lars Kober and Morten Schou",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 Zahir Anjum et al.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.2147/CLEP.S412787",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "855--866",
journal = "Clinical Epidemiology",
issn = "1179-1349",
publisher = "Dove Medical Press Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Initiation of Medical Therapy for Heart Failure Patients According to Kidney Function

T2 - A Danish Nationwide Study

AU - Anjum, Deewa Zahir

AU - Strange, Jarl Emanuel

AU - Fosbøl, Emil

AU - Garred, Caroline Hartwell

AU - Malik, Mariam Elmegaard

AU - Andersson, Charlotte

AU - Jhund, Pardeep S.

AU - McMurray, John J.V.

AU - Petrie, Mark C.

AU - Kober, Lars

AU - Schou, Morten

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 Zahir Anjum et al.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Background: Use of medical therapies for heart failure (HF) patients with moderate kidney dysfunction is low. We hypothesized that lack of initiation of HF therapy reflects the clinicians’ reluctance in very elderly and frail patients more than kidney dysfunction itself. Methods: HF patients were identified from nationwide registers between 2014 and 2021. Information was obtained on eGFR, frailty status, and prescription of HF therapy. Patients were divided into three groups: normal kidney function (eGFR ≥ 60); moderate kidney dysfunction (GFR between 30 and 59); and severe kidney dysfunction (GFR < 30). Multivariate Cox models were used to study the association of eGFR, age, and frailty with use of HF therapy. Results: Of the 42,320 HF patients included those with lower eGFR were significantly older and frailer (median age 74.3 years and 37.8% frail). The crude initiation rate of all three drug classes decreased with decreasing eGFR in a stepwise fashion. After adjusting for age and frailty status, initiation of MRA decreased with decreasing kidney function (moderate kidney function HR 0.80(95% CI 0.77–0.84) and severe kidney function HR 0.24(0.21–0.27)). After adjusting for age and frailty status, initiation of RAS inhibitor and BB was not significantly lower for moderate kidney dysfunction (HR 0.97(0.93–1.02), and HR 1.06(0.97–1.16, respectively)). Initiation of RAS inhibitor was significantly lower for patients with severe kidney dysfunction, HR 0.45(0.41–0.50), but not for BB initiation HR 1.09(1.05–1.14). Conclusion: In a real-world HF cohort, patients with moderate and severe kidney dysfunction were associated with reduced use of MRA irrespective of age and frailty. Reduced use of RASi was associated with severe kidney dysfunction, whereas for patients with moderate kidney dysfunction, reduced use was mainly driven by aging and frailty. Reduced use of BB seemed to be primarily explained by aging and frailty.

AB - Background: Use of medical therapies for heart failure (HF) patients with moderate kidney dysfunction is low. We hypothesized that lack of initiation of HF therapy reflects the clinicians’ reluctance in very elderly and frail patients more than kidney dysfunction itself. Methods: HF patients were identified from nationwide registers between 2014 and 2021. Information was obtained on eGFR, frailty status, and prescription of HF therapy. Patients were divided into three groups: normal kidney function (eGFR ≥ 60); moderate kidney dysfunction (GFR between 30 and 59); and severe kidney dysfunction (GFR < 30). Multivariate Cox models were used to study the association of eGFR, age, and frailty with use of HF therapy. Results: Of the 42,320 HF patients included those with lower eGFR were significantly older and frailer (median age 74.3 years and 37.8% frail). The crude initiation rate of all three drug classes decreased with decreasing eGFR in a stepwise fashion. After adjusting for age and frailty status, initiation of MRA decreased with decreasing kidney function (moderate kidney function HR 0.80(95% CI 0.77–0.84) and severe kidney function HR 0.24(0.21–0.27)). After adjusting for age and frailty status, initiation of RAS inhibitor and BB was not significantly lower for moderate kidney dysfunction (HR 0.97(0.93–1.02), and HR 1.06(0.97–1.16, respectively)). Initiation of RAS inhibitor was significantly lower for patients with severe kidney dysfunction, HR 0.45(0.41–0.50), but not for BB initiation HR 1.09(1.05–1.14). Conclusion: In a real-world HF cohort, patients with moderate and severe kidney dysfunction were associated with reduced use of MRA irrespective of age and frailty. Reduced use of RASi was associated with severe kidney dysfunction, whereas for patients with moderate kidney dysfunction, reduced use was mainly driven by aging and frailty. Reduced use of BB seemed to be primarily explained by aging and frailty.

KW - chronic kidney disease

KW - epidemiology

KW - guideline-directed medical therapy

KW - heart failure

KW - real-world data

U2 - 10.2147/CLEP.S412787

DO - 10.2147/CLEP.S412787

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37489222

AN - SCOPUS:85165994514

VL - 15

SP - 855

EP - 866

JO - Clinical Epidemiology

JF - Clinical Epidemiology

SN - 1179-1349

ER -

ID: 363063772