Forecasting heart failure: Seasonal alignment of heart failure outcomes in New York.

IF 3.2 2区 医学 Q2 CARDIAC & CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEMS
Prerna Gupta, Ellen Brinza, Prateeti Khazanie, Pamela N Peterson, P Michael Ho, David P Kao
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Seasonal variations have been observed in heart failure (HF) hospitalization. Numerous explanatory mechanisms have been proposed, but no prior studies have examined potential contributors directly. Our objective was to identify specific factors that could contribute to seasonal variability using a large longitudinal dataset of HF hospitalizations.

Methods: Hospital discharge data were obtained for all hospitals in the state of New York from 1994 to 2007. Records with a primary diagnosis of HF by the International Classification of Diseases-9 Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) code (428.xx and 425.xx) were included. Year and month of admission were used as predictors to evaluate outcomes of in-hospital mortality, population-adjusted daily rate of hospital admissions and length of stay (LOS) using univariable regression including a sinusoidal model to assess the seasonality of HF outcomes. Observations were then adjusted for multiple medical covariables as well as the average local monthly temperature and humidity at each hospital using data from the Global Historical Climate Network to identify potential modifiers of seasonal variability.

Results: Among 949 907 records, the median age was 76 [inter-quartile range (IQR) 65-84 years old], and the cohort was 54% female (510 945 records). The population-adjusted rate of HF admissions per day increased by 1.1 admissions/day/year between 1994 and 2007, whereas in-hospital mortality and LOS decreased by -0.3%/year and -0.3 days/year, respectively (P < 0.001 for all). Seasonal trends were identified for daily HF admissions (February peak, P < 0.0001), mortality (January peak, P < 0.001) and LOS (January peak, P < 0.01). Cosinor analysis revealed significant periodicity for HF admission rate (amplitude = ±0.9 admissions/day/100 000 people, P < 0.001), in-hospital mortality (amplitude = ±0.47%, P < 0.001) and LOS (amplitude = ±0.23 days, P < 0.01). No other patient characteristics were significant modifiers of seasonality. Odds of mortality were highest in July rather than January when adjusted for average local temperature but not humidity.

Conclusions: Adverse outcomes in patients hospitalized with HF were significantly worse in the winter months even when adjusted for patient characteristics and concurrent acute diagnoses such as pneumonia. Local ambient temperature was the strongest modifier of the observed seasonality. Given the increasing frequency of extreme weather events, additional work to determine the mechanisms of this and other environmental risk factors is urgently needed.

预测心力衰竭:纽约心力衰竭结果的季节性调整。
背景:已观察到心力衰竭(HF)住院的季节性变化。人们提出了许多解释机制,但此前没有研究直接考察过潜在的诱因。我们的目标是利用一个大型心衰住院纵向数据集来确定可能导致季节性变化的具体因素。方法:我们获得了纽约州所有医院 1994 年至 2007 年的出院数据。根据《国际疾病分类-9 临床修正》(ICD-9-CM)代码(428.xx 和 425.xx)主要诊断为心房颤动的记录均包括在内。将入院年份和月份作为预测因子,使用单变量回归(包括正弦模型)评估院内死亡率、人口调整后每日入院率和住院时间(LOS)等结果,以评估心房颤动结果的季节性。然后,利用全球历史气候网络的数据,根据多个医疗协变量以及每家医院当地的月平均温度和湿度对观察结果进行调整,以确定季节性变化的潜在调节因素:在 949 907 份记录中,中位年龄为 76 岁[四分位数间距 (IQR) 65-84 岁],队列中 54% 为女性(510 945 份记录)。1994 年至 2007 年间,经人口调整后的高血压入院率增加了 1.1 次/天/年,而院内死亡率和 LOS 分别下降了-0.3%/年和-0.3 天/年(P 结论:高血压住院患者的不良预后在 1994 年至 2007 年间增加了 1.1 次/天/年,而院内死亡率和 LOS 分别下降了-0.3%/年和-0.3 天/年:即使对患者特征和并发急性诊断(如肺炎)进行调整,高血压住院患者在冬季的不良预后也明显较差。当地环境温度对观察到的季节性影响最大。鉴于极端天气事件日益频繁,亟需开展更多工作来确定这一因素和其他环境风险因素的作用机制。
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来源期刊
ESC Heart Failure
ESC Heart Failure Medicine-Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
7.90%
发文量
461
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: ESC Heart Failure is the open access journal of the Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology dedicated to the advancement of knowledge in the field of heart failure. The journal aims to improve the understanding, prevention, investigation and treatment of heart failure. Molecular and cellular biology, pathology, physiology, electrophysiology, pharmacology, as well as the clinical, social and population sciences all form part of the discipline that is heart failure. Accordingly, submission of manuscripts on basic, translational, clinical and population sciences is invited. Original contributions on nursing, care of the elderly, primary care, health economics and other specialist fields related to heart failure are also welcome, as are case reports that highlight interesting aspects of heart failure care and treatment.
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