Literature DB >> 16911909

Validation of prognostic models among patients with advanced heart failure.

David S Frankel1, John D Piette, Mariell Jessup, Kimberly Craig, Faith Pickering, Lee R Goldberg.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The ability to accurately predict heart failure outcomes is essential to guiding treatment decisions but several competing risk stratification models exist. METHODS AND
RESULTS: We prospectively collected data on 280 patients with advanced heart failure recruited from 16 sites across the United States. Deaths and cardiac transplantations within the following 4 years were identified. Medline was searched to systematically identify widely cited heart failure severity classification models predicting long-term survival among patients with heart failure, and 4 were selected for validation. We used Kaplan-Meier survival curves, receiver-operating characteristic curves, and Cox proportional hazards modeling to identify the prognostic significance of each model's risk score and the individual contribution of the clinical components within each model. Average follow-up was 31.2 months; 148 deaths or transplantations occurred. Each model that we evaluated identified patients with significantly different prognoses. However, each was limited in overall predictive power, and many component patient characteristics did not have independent prognostic significance. Prognostic factors found to be most powerful within their models included: increasing age, ischemic cardiomyopathy, history of cardiomyopathy, ankle edema, decreased peak oxygen consumption, and absence of beta-blocker use.
CONCLUSION: Although each of the models succeeded in risk-stratifying patients to some extent, all 4 models had shortcomings. There is a need for a contemporary model, derived from a patient population managed in accordance with current heart failure guidelines, applicable to all heart failure etiologies, relying on readily available clinical data.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16911909     DOI: 10.1016/j.cardfail.2006.03.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Card Fail        ISSN: 1071-9164            Impact factor:   5.712


  3 in total

1.  Improvement in health-related quality of life after hospitalization predicts event-free survival in patients with advanced heart failure.

Authors:  Debra K Moser; Laura Yamokoski; Jie Lena Sun; Ginger A Conway; Karen A Hartman; Judith A Graziano; Cynthia Binanay; Lynne W Stevenson
Journal:  J Card Fail       Date:  2009-06-25       Impact factor: 5.712

2.  Predicting poor outcomes in heart failure.

Authors:  David H Smith; Eric S Johnson; Micah L Thorp; Xiuhai Yang; Amanda Petrik; Robert W Platt; Kathy Crispell
Journal:  Perm J       Date:  2011

3.  Predicting costs of care in heart failure patients.

Authors:  David H Smith; Eric S Johnson; David K Blough; Micah L Thorp; Xiuhai Yang; Amanda F Petrik; Kathy A Crispell
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2012-11-30       Impact factor: 2.655

  3 in total

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