Heart Failure in a Dedicated Outpatient Clinic: Results after 58 Month Follow-Up. Can it be Enough?
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Date
2015Author
Mirra, Marco
Vitulano, Gennaro
Virtuoso, N.
Tufano, Nicola
D’Auria, Francesco
De Angelis, S.
Giudice, Roberta
Lambiase, Alessandro
Gigantino, Alberto
Piscione, Federico
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Show full item recordAbstract
Incidence of chronic heart failure (HF) is
rapidly increasing, approaching a 10 per 1000 rate after
65 years of age. In the last decades, despite
pharmacological, interventional and supportive
innovations, HF prognosis remained poor, with about
30% of death within one year from the diagnosis.
Current guidelines recommend for these patients
management programs providing follow-up through
dedicated outpatient clinic. Limits of these programs
are represented by great difficulties in getting patients
adherence, being still too elevated the rate of
abandonments. In this paper, we analyzed the impact of
58 months of activity in our dedicated to heart failure
outpatient clinic on mortality, hospitalization and
abandonment rate. 477 HF patients (346 M, 72.5%,
mean age 69.6 years) were enrolled. Mean follow-up
and visit were 18.2 and 2.6 months respectively. Total
mortality rate was 11.5%, 4% of patients per year.
Total hospitalizations for acute HF were 212 and,
among all patients left in follow-up, the number of
hospitalizations for acute de-compensation
significantly decreased from 0.49/patient/year before
enrollment to 0.29/patient/year during follow-up
(p=0.015). Patients who abandoned outpatient clinic
were 94 (19%, 1 abandonment every 23 days), mostly
observed over the first months of activity. In
conclusion, our patients experienced a major decrease
in rates of acute de-compensation and need of inhospital
admissions.