Literature DB >> 18582804

Survival and quality of life in patients with cardiac resynchronization therapy for severe heart failure and in heart transplant recipients within a contemporary heart failure management program.

Michael Becker1, Nora Erdmann, Emilia Stegemann, Dirk Benke, Patrick N Schauerte, Wolfgang M Schaefer, Ruediger Autschbach, Malte Kelm, Karl-Christian Koch.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Current treatment of advanced chronic heart failure comprises pharmacologic approaches, multidisciplinary management strategies and device therapy. We sought to compare the outcome after cardiac synchronization therapy (CRT) with the outcome after heart transplantation within a contemporary heart failure management program.
METHODS: In a cohort study, survival and quality of life were assessed in 105 patients who had received CRT (53% with defibrillator) for severe heart failure and in 112 heart transplant recipients attending a heart failure clinic at a tertiary hospital. For assessment of health-related quality of life the Medical Outcome Short Form 36 (SF-36) was applied to the survivors. A propensity score for receiving transplantation vs CRT was developed using logistic regression and was incorporated into statistical models.
RESULTS: Severity of heart failure before heart transplantation or CRT was similar. Survival was not different between device recipients and transplant recipients by Kaplan-Meier analysis. Cox regression analysis with time-dependent covariates revealed a significant interaction between treatment and time, which favored transplantation late after intervention. There were no significant differences in 7 of 8 subjective measures of health-related quality of life. The score for physical functioning was higher in the transplantation group; this difference remained of borderline significance after multivariate adjustment.
CONCLUSIONS: Contemporary management of patients with advanced heart failure including CRT leads to improved survival and quality of life and diminishes the difference in these outcomes between conservative management and heart transplantation within the time-frame studied. Patient selection for heart transplantation requires consideration of these results.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18582804     DOI: 10.1016/j.healun.2008.03.024

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Heart Lung Transplant        ISSN: 1053-2498            Impact factor:   10.247


  3 in total

1.  One-year outcome after CRT implantation in NYHA class IV in comparison to NYHA class III patients.

Authors:  Andreas Schuchert; Carmine Muto; Themistoklis Maounis; Robert Frank; Rita Omega Ella; Alexander Polauck; Luigi Padeletti
Journal:  Clin Res Cardiol       Date:  2013-03-31       Impact factor: 5.460

2.  Depression, psychological distress, and quality of life in patients with cardioverter defibrillator with or without cardiac resynchronization therapy.

Authors:  Christian Knackstedt; Marlies Arndt; Karl Mischke; Nikolaus Marx; Fred Nieman; Hanns Jürgen Kunert; Patrick Schauerte; Christine Norra
Journal:  Heart Vessels       Date:  2013-06-04       Impact factor: 2.037

3.  Quality of life measured with EuroQol-five dimensions questionnaire predicts long-term mortality, response, and reverse remodelling in cardiac resynchronization therapy patients.

Authors:  Klaudia Vivien Nagy; Gábor Széplaki; Péter Perge; András Mihály Boros; Annamária Kosztin; Astrid Apor; Levente Molnár; Szabolcs Szilágyi; Tamás Tahin; Endre Zima; Valentina Kutyifa; László Gellér; Béla Merkely
Journal:  Europace       Date:  2018-09-01       Impact factor: 5.214

  3 in total

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