Prognostic role of renal replacement therapy among hospitalized patients with heart failure in the Brazilian national public health system.
Coy-Canguçu. Andréa A; Antunes-Correa. Lígia M LM; Mazzali. Marilda M; Abrão. Paula P; Ronco. Fernanda F; Teixeira. Cinthia Montenegro CM; Viana. Karynna Pimentel KP; Cordeiro. Guilherme G; Longato. Mauricio M; Coelho. Otávio Rizzi OR; Matos-Souza. José Roberto JR; Nadruz. Wilson W; Sposito. Andrei C AC; Petersen. Steffen E SE; Jerosch-Herold. Michael M; Coelho-Filho. Otávio Rizzi OR
Key Findings
- In‑hospital mortality for acute heart failure was 11.7%, higher than in North America or Europe.
- Renal replacement therapy (dialysis) was used in 1.4% of survivors and 7.7% of non‑survivors.
- Dialysis was linked to a 56% higher risk of death and a three‑fold longer hospital stay, plus higher daily costs.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers and self‑experimenters, this study doesn’t provide actionable protocols or dosing advice. It mainly highlights that kidney failure during heart failure hospitalizations is a serious risk factor and raises awareness about the high mortality and cost associated with dialysis in this setting.
Summary
In Brazil’s public hospitals, about 12% of people admitted for acute heart failure die in the hospital, and those who need kidney‑support treatments (dialysis) are even more likely to die and cost more to treat.
Abstract
Data on patients hospitalized with acute heart failure in Brazil scarce. We performed a cross-sectional, retrospective, records-based study using data retrieved from a large public database of heart failure admissions to any hospital from the Brazilian National Public Health System (SUS) (SUS Hospital Information System [SIHSUS] registry) to determine the in-hospital all-cause mortality rate, in-hospital renal replacement therapy rate and its association with outcome. In total, 910,128 hospitalizations due to heart failure were identified in the SIHSUS registry between April 2017 and August 2021, of which 106,383 (11.7%) resulted in in-hospital death. Renal replacement therapy (required by 8,179 non-survivors [7.7%] and 11,496 survivors [1.4%, <i>p</i> < 0.001]) was associated with a 56% increase in the risk of death in the univariate regression model (HR 1.56, 95% CI 1.52 -1.59), a more than threefold increase of the duration of hospitalization, and a 45% or greater increase of cost per day. All forms of renal replacement therapy remained independently associated with in-hospital mortality in multivariable analysis (intermittent hemodialysis: HR 1.64, 95% CI 1.60 -1.69; continuous hemodialysis: HR 1.52, 95% CI 1.42 -1.63; peritoneal dialysis: HR 1.47, 95% CI 1.20 -1.88). The in-hospital mortality rate of 11.7% observed among patients with acute heart failure admitted to Brazilian public hospitals was alarmingly high, exceeding that of patients admitted to North American and European institutions. This is the first report to quantify the rate of renal replacement therapy in patients hospitalized with acute heart failure in Brazil.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-08-23T00:00:00.000Z
10.3389/fcvm.2023.1226481
40