Lissin Lynette W, Gauri Andre J, Froelicher Victor F, Ghayoumi Afshin, Myers Jonathan, Giacommini John
Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Stanford University Medical Center, Palo Alto, California 94304, USA.
J Card Fail. 2002 Aug;8(4):206-15. doi: 10.1054/jcaf.2002.126812.
To evaluate the prognostic characteristics of body mass index (BMI) and standard exercise test variables in a consecutive series of patients with mild to moderate congestive heart failure (CHF) referred for standard exercise tests.
Controversy exists regarding the prognostic importance of BMI, etiology, and exercise test variables in patients with CHF.
All patients referred for evaluation at two university-affiliated Veterans Affairs Medical Centers who underwent treadmill tests for clinical indications between 1987 and 2000 were determined to be dead or alive using the Social Security Death Index after a mean 6 years follow-up. Clinical and exercise test variables were collected prospectively according to standard definitions; testing and data management were performed in a standardized fashion using a computer-assisted protocol. Survival analysis was performed using all-cause mortality as the endpoint for follow-up.
A total of 522 patients with a history and clinical findings of CHF underwent exercise testing. Forty-two percent died during the follow-up period, for an average annual mortality of 6.7%. Cox proportional hazards model chose peak metabolic equivalents (METs), BMI, age, and ischemic etiology in rank order as independently and significantly associated with time to death. A score based on these variables classified patients into low (2% annual mortality), medium (5.2%), and high-risk groups (7% annual mortality).
Standard exercise testing and BMI can be used to estimate prognosis in outpatients with heart failure. A score incorporating METs, BMI, age, and etiology efficiently stratified these patients. BMI was chosen by the survival analysis, confirming its surprising inverse relationship to prognosis in CHF patients (i.e., heavier patients do better).
评估一系列因接受标准运动试验而转诊的轻至中度充血性心力衰竭(CHF)患者的体重指数(BMI)及标准运动试验变量的预后特征。
CHF患者中,BMI、病因及运动试验变量的预后重要性存在争议。
1987年至2000年间,两所大学附属医院的退伍军人事务医疗中心因临床指征接受跑步机试验的所有患者,在平均6年随访后,使用社会保障死亡指数确定其生死情况。根据标准定义前瞻性收集临床和运动试验变量;采用计算机辅助方案以标准化方式进行检测和数据管理。以全因死亡率作为随访终点进行生存分析。
共有522例有CHF病史和临床症状的患者接受了运动试验。42%的患者在随访期间死亡,平均年死亡率为6.7%。Cox比例风险模型按顺序选择峰值代谢当量(METs)、BMI、年龄和缺血性病因作为与死亡时间独立且显著相关的因素。基于这些变量的评分将患者分为低风险组(年死亡率2%)、中风险组(5.2%)和高风险组(年死亡率7%)。
标准运动试验和BMI可用于评估心力衰竭门诊患者的预后。包含METs、BMI、年龄和病因的评分能有效对这些患者进行分层。生存分析选择了BMI,证实了其与CHF患者预后令人惊讶的负相关关系(即体重较重的患者预后较好)。