Autonomic Nerve Function Predicts Risk of Early Death after Discharge in Acute Medical Disease - 26/06/24
Abstract |
Background |
Heart rate variability, a marker of autonomic function, has shown promising prognostic results in specific populations, but has not been tested in a general medical population. We hypothesized that heart rate variability identifies high-risk medical patients early after admission to the hospital.
Methods |
This was a single-center prospective cohort study of acutely admitted medical patients aged ≥18 years with a life expectancy ≥3 months, included between 2019-2023. Unstable patients needing direct admission to the intensive care unit were excluded. Heart rate variability was recorded within 24 hours of admission for 10 minutes. The standard deviation of normal-normal beats (SDNN) was the primary heart rate variability marker. Low SDNN was defined as the lowest tertile (≤22 ms). The primary outcome was 30-day all-cause mortality. The secondary outcome was 30-day readmission or mortality.
Results |
Among 721 patients included, low SDNN carried an 8-fold greater risk of 30-day mortality in univariate analysis (hazard ratio [HR] 8.3; P = .001); in multivariate analyses a 4-fold greater risk (HR 3.8; P = .037). Low SDNN was associated with the combined outcome of 30-day mortality or readmission (HR 1.5; P = .03) in multivariate analysis. In receiver operating characteristics analyses, low SDNN improved the predictive accuracy of early warning score for 30-day mortality or readmission from 0.63 to 0.71 (P = .008) but did not improve the accuracy for 30-day mortality alone.
Conclusions |
In patients admitted due to acute medical illness, low heart rate variability predicted 30-day mortality and readmission, suggesting heart rate variability as a tool to identify patients at high and low risk of relevant endpoints.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Graphical Abstract |
Keywords : Acute medicine, Cardiac autonomic function, Cardiology, Heart rate variability, Internal medicine
Plan
Funding: This study has been conducted with support and funding from several research grants from Bispebjerg Hospital and a grant from the private fund “Læge Sofus Carl Emil Friis og Hustru Olga Doris Friis' Legat.” The funders had no role in the design, collection, analysis, or interpretation of data. Nor did the funders have any role in the writing of the manuscript or the decision for publication. All researchers were independent from the funders and no funder had access to the research data at any point in time. |
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Conflict of Interest: None. |
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Authorship: All authors had access to the data and a role in writing this manuscript. |
Vol 137 - N° 7
P. 649 - juillet 2024 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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