| Literature DB >> 31419004 |
Jasper Tromp1,2,3, João Pedro Ferreira4, Satit Janwanishstaporn5, Monica Shah6, Barry Greenberg7, Faiez Zannad4, Carolyn S P Lam1,2,3,8.
Abstract
With increasingly large sample sizes required to demonstrate event reduction, heart failure outcome trials are no longer being performed in a small group of selected patients and countries, but at a global scale with worldwide contribution of patients from countries with considerable differences in background therapy, socioeconomic status and healthcare practices. Recent studies have highlighted how socioeconomic determinants rather than geographical factors may underlie the heterogeneity of patient populations across the globe. Therefore, in this review, we evaluated (i) regional differences in patient characteristics and outcomes in recent epidemiologic studies; (ii) regional differences in worldwide representativeness of clinical trial populations; and (iii) the role of socioeconomic determinants in driving country differences in heart failure trial enrolment and clinical outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Geographic differences; Heart failure; Outcome; Socioeconomic status
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31419004 DOI: 10.1002/ejhf.1585
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Heart Fail ISSN: 1388-9842 Impact factor: 15.534