Projects

Global Variations in Heart Failure Etiology, Management, and Outcomes

Groups and Associations G-CHF Investigators; Philip Joseph , Ambuj Roy , Eva Lonn , Stefan Störk , John Floras , Lisa Mielniczuk , Jean-Lucien Rouleau , Jun Zhu , Anastase Dzudie,Kumar Balasubramanian , Kamilu Karaye , Khalid F AlHabib , Juan Esteban Gómez-Mesa , Kelley R Branch , Abel Makubi , Andrzej Budaj , Alvaro Avezum , Thomas Wittlinger , Georg Ertl , Charles Mondo , Nana Pogosova , Aldo Pietro Maggioni , Andres Orlandini , Alexander Parkhomenko , Ahmed ElSayed , Patricio López-Jaramillo , Alex Grinvalds 1, Ahmet Temizhan , Camilla Hage , Lars H Lund , Khawar Kazmi , Fernando Lanas , Sanjib Kumar Sharma , Keith Fox , John J V McMurray , Darryl Leong Hisham Dokainish Aditya Khetan , Gerald Yonga , Kristian Kragholm , Kerolos Wagdy Shaker , Julius Chacha Mwita , Arif Abdullatif Al-Mulla , François Alla , Albertino Damasceno , José Silva-Cardoso , Antonio L Dans , Karen Sliwa , Martin O'Donnell , Nooshin Bazargani , Antoni Bayés-Genís , Tara McCready , Jeffrey Probstfield , Salim Yusuf
JAMA 2023

Importance: Most epidemiological studies of heart failure (HF) have been conducted in high-income countries with limited comparable data from middle- or low-income countries.

Objective: To examine differences in HF etiology, treatment, and outcomes between groups of countries at different levels of economic development.

Design, setting, and participants: Multinational HF registry of 23 341 participants in 40 high-income, upper-middle-income, lower-middle-income, and low-income countries, followed up for a median period of 2.0 years.

Main outcomes and measures: HF cause, HF medication use, hospitalization, and death.

Results: Mean (SD) age of participants was 63.1 (14.9) years, and 9119 (39.1%) were female. The most common cause of HF was ischemic heart disease (38.1%) followed by hypertension (20.2%). The proportion of participants with HF with reduced ejection fraction taking the combination of a β-blocker, renin-angiotensin system inhibitor, and mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist was highest in upper-middle-income (61.9%) and high-income countries (51.1%), and it was lowest in low-income (45.7%) and lower-middle-income countries (39.5%) (P < .001). The age- and sex- standardized mortality rate per 100 person-years was lowest in high-income countries (7.8 [95% CI, 7.5-8.2]), 9.3 (95% CI, 8.8-9.9) in upper-middle-income countries, 15.7 (95% CI, 15.0-16.4) in lower-middle-income countries, and it was highest in low-income countries (19.1 [95% CI, 17.6-20.7]). Hospitalization rates were more frequent than death rates in high-income countries (ratio = 3.8) and in upper-middle-income countries (ratio = 2.4), similar in lower-middle-income countries (ratio = 1.1), and less frequent in low-income countries (ratio = 0.6). The 30-day case-fatality rate after first hospital admission was lowest in high-income countries (6.7%), followed by upper-middle-income countries (9.7%), then lower-middle-income countries (21.1%), and highest in low-income countries (31.6%). The proportional risk of death within 30 days of a first hospital admission was 3- to 5-fold higher in lower-middle-income countries and low-income countries compared with high-income countries after adjusting for patient characteristics and use of long-term HF therapies.

Conclusions and relevance: This study of HF patients from 40 different countries and derived from 4 different economic levels demonstrated differences in HF etiologies, management, and outcomes. These data may be useful in planning approaches to improve HF prevention and treatment globally.

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