Title of article
Continental Differences in Clinical Characteristics, Management, and Outcomes in Patients Hospitalized With Worsening Heart Failure: Results From the EVEREST (Efficacy of Vasopressin Antagonism in Heart Failure: Outcome Study with Tolvaptan) Program Orig
Author/Authors
John E.A. Blair، نويسنده , , Faïez Zannad، نويسنده , , Marvin A. Konstam، نويسنده , , Thomas Cook، نويسنده , , Brian Traver، نويسنده , , John C. Burnett Jr، نويسنده , , Liliana Grinfeld، نويسنده , , Holly Krasa، نويسنده , , Aldo P. Maggioni، نويسنده , , Cesare Orlandi، نويسنده , , Karl Swedberg، نويسنده , , James E. Udelson، نويسنده , , Christopher Zimmer، نويسنده , , Mihai Gheorghiade and EVEREST Investigators، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
9
From page
1640
To page
1648
Abstract
Objectives
Our aim was to examine continental and regional differences in baseline characteristics and post-discharge clinical outcomes in the EVEREST (Efficacy of Vasopressin Antagonism in Heart Failure: Outcome Study with Tolvaptan) trial.
Background
Continental and regional differences in clinical trials of acute heart failure syndromes (AHFS) have not been well studied.
Methods
We analyzed data from the EVEREST trial, which randomized 4,133 patients hospitalized for worsening (HF) and left ventricular ejection fraction ≤40% to oral tolvaptan, a vasopressin antagonist, or placebo and followed for a median of 9.9 months. Baseline characteristics, mortality, and outcomes were analyzed across North America (n = 1,251), South America (n = 688), Western Europe (564 patients), and Eastern Europe (n = 1,619).
Results
There were major differences between the 4 groups in the severity, etiology, and management of HF. Unadjusted 1-year mortality and cardiovascular mortality/HF hospitalization were 30.4% and 52.5% in North America, 27.2% and 41.6% in South America, 27.1% and 47.3% in Western Europe, and 20.5% and 35.3% in Eastern Europe. After adjustment, South American patients had the highest overall mortality (hazard ratio: 1.42, 95% confidence interval: 1.15 to 1.76), while Eastern European patients had the lowest cardiovascular death and HF hospitalization rate (hazard ratio: 0.84, 95% confidence interval: 0.73 to 0.97), compared with patients in North America.
Conclusions
Major continental and regional differences in HF severity, etiology, and management exist among AHFS patients, resulting in varied post-discharge outcomes, despite pre-defined selection criteria. These differences should be taken into account when planning global trials in AHFS. (Efficacy of Vasopressin Antagonism in Heart Failure: Outcome Study with Tolvaptan [EVEREST]; NCT00071331)
Keywords
outcomes , heart failure , Regional differences
Journal title
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)
Record number
473686
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