Resumo (PT):
Abstract (EN):
Background: Heart failure (HF) is associated with poor health status, and high morbi-mortality. However, it is not well established how health status changes correlate with treatment effects on clinical outcomes. Our aim was to study the association between treatment-induced changes in health-status, assessed by Kansas City Cardiomy-opathy Questionnaire 23 (KCCQ-23), and clinical outcomes in chronic HF. Methods: Systematic search of phase III-IV pharmacological RCTs in chronic HF that assessed KCCQ-23 changes and clinical outcomes throughout follow-up. We studied the association between treatment induced changes in KCCQ-23 and treatment effects on clinical outcomes (HF hospitalization or cardiovascular death, HF hospitali-zation, cardiovascular death, and all-cause death) using weighted random-effects meta-regression. Results: Sixteen trials were included, enrolling a total of 65,608 participants. Treatment induced KCCQ-23 changes were moderately correlated with treatment effects on the combined outcome of HF hospitalization or cardiovascular mortality (regression coefficient (RC) =-0.047, 95%CI:-0.085 to-0.009; R2 = 49%), a cor-relation that was mainly driven by HF hospitalization (RC =-0.076, 95%CI:-0.124 to-0.029; R2 = 56%). Correlations of treatment induced KCCQ-23 changes with cardiovascular death (RC =-0.029, 95%CI:-0.073 to 0.015; R2 = 10%) and all-cause death (RC =-0.019, 95%CI:-0.057 to 0.019; R2 = 0%) were weak and non-significant. Conclusions: Treatment-induced changes in KCCQ-23 were moderately correlated with treatment-effects on HF hospitalizations but were not correlated with the effects on cardiovascular and all-cause mortality. Treatment -induced changes in patient-centered outcomes (i.e., KCCQ-23) may reflect non-fatal symptomatic changes in the clinical course of HF leading to hospitalization.
Language:
English
Type (Professor's evaluation):
Scientific
No. of pages:
9