Acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) is a health problem of great magnitude, because it is the most frequent cause of hospitalization of patients over 65 years old. Of these patients, more than 50% will be readmitted within the next six months with the consequent worsening prognosis, increased mortality and high costs associated. In fact, two-third parts of the costs of this condition are due to hospitalizations. Hence the increased importance of ADHF and its associated hospitalizations as an essential event in the natural history of the disease on to address therapeutic efforts. However, at the present time there is a change of scenario that makes that more than half of these patients show HF with preserved ejection fraction (PEF), so that acute heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (AHF-PEF) is a fact with high prevalence and epidemiological relevance. To this the investigators must add that, unlike patients with depressed EF, HF-PEF has no therapeutic strategies that may have proven a recovery of the affected patients. All this makes that overall heart failure with PEF and AHF-PEF represent a major health problem. However, despite of the lack of effective treatments, there are also opportunities for improvement both in terms of morbidity and mortality that should be evaluated. Rather than looking for therapies or new specific drugs, these opportunities may be in the use of management strategies among which the use of biomarkers and their monitoring could be key. In this regard, NT-proBNP has been shown to correlate with severity and prognosis, including the risk of decompensation. Nevertheless, whilst the latest guidelines for heart failure management recommend its use in the diagnosis of HF, the use of biomarkers to monitor and guide treatment has not been included yet. The assumption of this study is that the use of NT-proBNP may serve as a therapeutic and management guideline for the in-patient with HF-PEF who is to be discharged, allowing a reduction of decompensations and hospitalizations as well as a better functional situation at 6 months. Several criteria have been proposed to define the syndrome of HFpEF according to the 2013 ACCF/AHA Heart Failure Guideline including (a) clinical signs or symptoms of HF; (b) evidence of preserved or normal LVEF; and (c) evidence of abnormal LV diastolic dysfunction that can be determined by Doppler echocardiography or cardiac catheterization The assay N-terminal proB-type natriuretic peptid is indicated as an aid in the diagnosis of individuals suspected of having congestive heart failure and detection of mild forms of cardiac dysfunction. The test also aids in the assessment of heart failure severity in patients diagnosed with congestive heart failure. This assay is further indicated for the risk stratification of patients with acute coronary syndrome and congestive heart failure, and it can also be used for monitoring the treatment in patients with left ventricular dysfunction.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
167
Hospital Virgen de La Arrixaca
Murcia, Spain
Decrease of rehospitalizations due to acute heart failure at 6 months after discharge.
To assess if a clinical management strategy that includes the monitoring of NT-proBNP concentrations after hospital discharge of patients with AHF-PEF reduces rehospitalizations due to AHF at 6 months after discharge (defined as unplanned hospital admission lasting for at least 24 h and due to HF decompensation).
Time frame: 6 months
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