Journal of Cardiac Failure
Volume 16, Issue 10 , Pages 827-834, October 2010

Right Ventricular Dysfunction is a Strong Predictor of Developing Atrial Fibrillation in Acutely Decompensated Heart Failure Patients, ACAP-HF Data Analysis

This work was presented in part at the 2009 Annual Scientific Session of the American College of Cardiology, Orlando, Florida.

ACAP Program, Division of Cardiology, St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center, Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons, New York, NY

Received 23 February 2010; received in revised form 4 May 2010; accepted 6 May 2010. published online 17 June 2010.

Abstract 

Background

Heart failure and atrial fibrillation (AFib) are the twin epidemics of modern cardiovascular disease. The incidence of new-onset AFib in acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) patients is difficult to predict and the short- and long-term outcomes of AFib in a cohort of patients admitted with ADHF are unknown.

Methods and Results

A total of 904 patients admitted with ADHF were studied. Incidence of AFib on admission was recorded and a multivariate analysis was performed using echocardiographic parameters to specify the predictors of AFib incidence in this cohort. In 904 ADHF patients (57% male, mean age 69 ± 14 years), 81% had history of hypertension, 40% were diabetics, and 51% were smokers. A total of 63% of the patients had known heart failure (HF) with mean ejection fraction of 34% ± 21%, and 33% of the patients had ischemic cardiomyopathy as the etiology of HF. Echocardiographic parameters were: left atrial (LA) diameter 4.5 ± 0.8 cm, left ventricular end-systolic 4.1 ± 1.3 cm, left ventricular end-diastolic 5.3 ± 1.1 cm. Right ventricular dysfunction (RVD) was present in 34% of the patients. A total of 191 (21%) patients subsequently developed AFib with two thirds of the cases occurring in patients with RVD. Using a univariate analysis, older age (OR 1.02; P < .0001), history of HF (OR 2.93; P < .0001), LA dilation (OR 1.58; P < .0001), the presence of left ventricular hypertrophy (OR 3.01, P < .0001), and RVD (OR 4.93; P < .00001) were the strongest predictors for AFib. Controlling for LA size and left ventricular hypertrophy using a forward stepwise regression, RVD remained the strongest predictor (OR 4.45; P < .0001). Patients with RVD had more events (cardiac readmission and mortality) than those with normal RV (56% versus 38%; P < .00001), notably; all-cause mortality was 4.7%/year in the abnormal RV group versus 2.9%/year in the normal RV group; P < .05. RV function analyses by echocardiography further risk stratified these patients based on their rhythm categorizing those patients with abnormal RV and AFib as the ones with the worse prognosis.

Conclusion

RV dysfunction is a strong predictor for developing AFib in acutely decompensated systolic failure patients. Patients with AFib and RVD have the worse outcome specially when is combined with LV dysfunction, therefore; evaluation of RV function may substantiate the difference in HF prognosis.

Key Words: Acute decompensated systolic heart failure, right ventricular function, atrial fibrillation

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 See page 833 for disclosure information.

PII: S1071-9164(10)00210-1

doi:10.1016/j.cardfail.2010.05.004

Journal of Cardiac Failure
Volume 16, Issue 10 , Pages 827-834, October 2010