Hyperuricemia treatment in acute heart failure patients does not improve their long‐term prognosis: A propensity score matched analysis from the AHEAD registry
2019; Wiley; Volume: 42; Issue: 8 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1002/clc.23197
ISSN1932-8737
AutoresMarie Pavlušová, Jiří Jarkovský, Klára Benešová, Jiří Vítovec, Aleš Linhart, Petr Widimský, Lenka Špinarová, K Zeman, Jan Bělohlávek, Filip Málek, Marián Felšőci, Jiří Kettner, Petr Ošťádal, C Cíhalík, Jiří Špác, Hikmet Al‐Hiti, Marián Fedorco, Richard Fojt, Andreas Krüger, Josef Málek, Tereza Mikušová, Zdeněk Monhart, Stanislava Bohacova, Lidka Pohludkova, Filip Roháč, J. Václavík, Dagmar Vondraková, Klaudia Vyskočilová, Miroslav Bambuch, Gabriela Dostálová, Štěpán Havránek, Ivana Svobodová, Ladislav Dušek, Jindřich Špinar, Roman Miklík, Jiří Pařenica,
Tópico(s)Cardiovascular Function and Risk Factors
ResumoHyperuricemia is associated with a poorer prognosis in heart failure (HF) patients. Benefits of hyperuricemia treatment with allopurinol have not yet been confirmed in clinical practice. The aim of our work was to assess the benefit of allopurinol treatment in a large cohort of HF patients.The prospective acute heart failure registry (AHEAD) was used to select 3160 hospitalized patients with a known level of uric acid (UA) who were discharged in a stable condition. Hyperuricemia was defined as UA ≥500 μmoL/L and/or allopurinol treatment at admission. The patients were classified into three groups: without hyperuricemia, with treated hyperuricemia, and with untreated hyperuricemia at discharge. Two- and five-year all-cause mortality were defined as endpoints. Patients without hyperuricemia, unlike those with hyperuricemia, had a higher left ventricular ejection fraction, a better renal function, and higher hemoglobin levels, had less frequently diabetes mellitus and atrial fibrillation, and showed better tolerance to treatment with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors/angiotensin receptor blockers and/or beta-blockers.In a primary analysis, the patients without hyperuricemia had the highest survival rate. After using the propensity score to set up comparable groups, the patients without hyperuricemia had a similar 5-year survival rate as those with untreated hyperuricemia (42.0% vs 39.7%, P = 0.362) whereas those with treated hyperuricemia had a poorer prognosis (32.4% survival rate, P = 0.006 vs non-hyperuricemia group and P = 0.073 vs untreated group).Hyperuricemia was associated with an unfavorable cardiovascular risk profile in HF patients. Treatment with low doses of allopurinol did not improve the prognosis of HF patients.
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