Clinical presentation, shock severity and mortality in patients with de novo versus acute-on-chronic heart failure-related cardiogenic shock

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  • Jonas Sundermeyer
  • Caroline Kellner
  • Benedikt N Beer
  • Lisa Besch
  • Angela Dettling
  • Letizia Fausta Bertoldi
  • Stefan Blankenberg
  • Jeroen Dauw
  • Zouhir Dindane
  • Dennis Eckner
  • Ingo Eitel
  • Tobias Graf
  • Patrick Horn
  • Joanna Jozwiak-Nozdrzykowska
  • Paulus Kirchhof
  • Stefan Kluge
  • Axel Linke
  • Ulf Landmesser
  • Peter Luedike
  • Enzo Lüsebrink
  • Nicolas Majunke
  • Norman Mangner
  • Octavian Maniuc
  • Sven Möbius Winkler
  • Peter Nordbeck
  • Martin Orban
  • Federico Pappalardo
  • Matthias Pauschinger
  • Michal Pazdernik
  • Alastair Proudfoot
  • Matthew Kelham
  • Tienush Rassaf
  • Hermann Reichenspurner
  • Clemens Scherer
  • Paul Christian Schulze
  • Robert H G Schwinger
  • Carsten Skurk
  • Marek Sramko
  • Guido Tavazzi
  • Holger Thiele
  • Luca Villanova
  • Nuccia Morici
  • Ephraim B Winzer
  • Dirk Westermann
  • Benedikt Schrage

AIMS: Heart failure-related cardiogenic shock (HF-CS) accounts for a significant proportion of CS cases. Whether patients with de novo HF and those with acute-on-chronic HF in CS differ in clinical characteristics and outcome remains unclear. The aim of this study was to evaluate differences in clinical presentation and mortality between patients with de novo and acute-on-chronic HF-CS.

METHODS AND RESULTS: In this international observational study, patients with HF-CS from 16 tertiary care centres in five countries were enrolled between 2010 and 2021. To investigate differences in clinical presentation and 30-day mortality, adjusted logistic/Cox regression models were fitted. Patients (n = 1030) with HF-CS were analysed, of whom 486 (47.2%) presented with de novo HF-CS and 544 (52.8%) with acute-on-chronic HF-CS. Traditional markers of CS severity (e.g. blood pressure, heart rate and lactate) as well as use of treatments were comparable between groups. However, patients with acute-on-chronic HF-CS were more likely to have a higher CS severity and also a higher mortality risk, after adjusting for relevant confounders (de novo HF 45.5%, acute-on-chronic HF 55.9%, adjusted hazard ratio 1.38, 95% confidence interval 1.10-1.72, p = 0.005).

CONCLUSION: In this large HF-CS cohort, acute-on-chronic HF-CS was associated with more severe CS and higher mortality risk compared to de novo HF-CS, although traditional markers of CS severity and use of treatments were comparable. These findings highlight the vast heterogeneity of patients with HF-CS, emphasize that HF chronicity is a relevant disease modifier in CS, and indicate that future clinical trials should account for this.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEuropean Journal of Heart Failure
Volume26
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)432-444
Number of pages13
ISSN1567-4215
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Bibliographical note

© 2023 The Authors. European Journal of Heart Failure published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Cardiology.

    Research areas

  • Humans, Shock, Cardiogenic/etiology, Heart Failure, Prognosis, Hospital Mortality

ID: 387273636