Utility of the Seattle Heart Failure Model in Patients With Advanced Heart Failure

被引:114
|
作者
Kalogeropoulos, Andreas P. [1 ]
Georgiopoulou, Vasiliki V. [1 ]
Giamouzis, Grigorios [1 ]
Smith, Andrew L. [1 ]
Agha, Syed A. [1 ]
Waheed, Sana [1 ]
Laskar, Sonjoy [1 ]
Puskas, John [1 ]
Dunbar, Sandra [1 ]
Vega, David [1 ]
Levy, Wayne C. [2 ]
Butler, Javed [1 ]
机构
[1] Emory Univ, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA
[2] Univ Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
关键词
heart failure; prognosis; statistical models; IMPLANTABLE CARDIOVERTER-DEFIBRILLATOR; CARDIAC RESYNCHRONIZATION; OXYGEN-CONSUMPTION; SURVIVAL; VALIDATION; RISK; RACE; COMBINATION; POPULATION; PREDICTION;
D O I
10.1016/j.jacc.2008.10.023
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Objectives The aim of this study was to validate the Seattle Heart Failure Model (SHFM) in patients with advanced heart failure (HF). Background The SHFM was developed primarily from clinical trial databases and extrapolated the benefit of interventions from published data. Methods We evaluated the discrimination and calibration of SHFM in 445 advanced HF patients (age 52 +/- 12 years, 68.5% male, 52.4% white, ejection fraction 18 +/- 8%) referred for cardiac transplantation. The primary end point was death (n = 92), urgent transplantation (n = 14), or left ventricular assist device (LVAD) implantation (n = 3); a secondary analysis was performed on mortality alone. Results Patients were receiving optimal therapy (angiotensin-II modulation 92.8%, beta-blockers 91.5%, aldosterone antagonists 46.3%), and 71.0% had an implantable device (defibrillator 30.4%, biventricular pacemaker 3.4%, combined 37.3%). During a median follow-up of 21 months, 109 patients (24.5%) had an event. Although discrimination was adequate (c-statistic > 0.7), the SHFM overall underestimated absolute risk ( observed vs. predicted event rate: 11.0% vs. 9.2%, 21.0% vs. 16.6%, and 27.9% vs. 22.8% at 1, 2, and 3 years, respectively). Risk underprediction was more prominent in patients with an implantable device. The SHFM had different calibration properties in white versus black patients, leading to net underestimation of absolute risk in blacks. Race-specific recalibration improved the accuracy of predictions. When analysis was restricted to mortality, the SHFM exhibited better performance. Conclusions In patients with advanced HF, the SHFM offers adequate discrimination, but absolute risk is underestimated, especially in blacks and in patients with devices. This is more prominent when including transplantation and LVAD implantation as an end point. (J Am Coll Cardiol 2009; 53: 334-42) (C) 2009 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation
引用
收藏
页码:334 / 342
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Validation of the Seattle Heart Failure Model in the Swedish Heart Failure Registry
    Yang, Sushan
    Lund, Lars H.
    Li, Song
    Dahlstrom, Ulf
    Sartipy, Ulrik
    Levy, Wayne
    CIRCULATION, 2019, 140
  • [22] Timely access to care - Risk stratification utilizing the Seattle heart failure model in patients with advanced heart failure: Dying to be seen
    Billia, Filio
    Micevski, Vaska
    Carson, Susan
    Delgado, Diego H.
    Ross, Heather J.
    CIRCULATION, 2007, 116 (16) : 736 - 737
  • [23] Prognostic Impact of the Addition of Ventilatory Efficiency to the Seattle Heart Failure Model in Patients With Heart Failure
    Levy, Wayne C.
    Arena, Ross
    Wagoner, Lynne E.
    Dardas, Todd
    Abraham, William T.
    JOURNAL OF CARDIAC FAILURE, 2012, 18 (08) : 614 - 619
  • [24] PERFORMANCE OF THE SEATTLE HEART FAILURE MODEL IN PATIENTS DISCHARGED AFTER ACUTE HEART FAILURE HOSPITALIZATION
    Li, Song
    Nunez, Julio
    Nunez, Eduardo
    Sanchis, Juan
    Levy, Wayne C.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY, 2017, 69 (11) : 777 - 777
  • [25] Impact of Renal Function on Prognostic Utility of the Seattle Heart Failure Model
    Vakil, Kairav
    Dardas, Todd
    Dhar, Sunil
    Moorman, Alec
    Anand, Inder
    Maggioni, Aldo
    Linker, David
    Mozaffarian, Dariush
    Levy, Wayne
    JOURNAL OF CARDIAC FAILURE, 2012, 18 (08) : S78 - S79
  • [26] Validation of the Seattle heart failure model (SHFM) in an Iranian heart failure population
    Soltani, M. H.
    Omidvar, R.
    Soltani, E.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HEART FAILURE, 2020, 22 : 69 - 70
  • [27] Validation of the seattle heart failure model (SHFM) in an Iranian heart failure population
    Soltani, M. H.
    Mirzaei, M.
    Hosseini, M. Seyed
    Omidvar, R.
    Dehghani, A.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HEART FAILURE, 2017, 19 : 416 - 416
  • [28] Application of the Seattle Heart Failure Model to Patients Presented to a Heart Transplant Committee
    Gorodeski, Eiran Z.
    Chu, Eric C.
    Chow, Chen H.
    Levy, Wayne C.
    Hsich, Eileen
    Starling, Randall C.
    CIRCULATION, 2009, 120 (18) : S902 - S903
  • [29] Usefulness of Seattle Heart Failure Model in Heart Failure Patients with Reduced Ejection Fraction in the Clinical Settings
    Miyaji, Kotaro
    Shakkya, Sandeep
    Hayakawa, Naoki
    Suzuki, Hiroki
    Kodera, Satoshi
    Ishiwaki, Hikaru
    Kushida, Shunichi
    Kanda, Junji
    Sakuma, Yukie
    Satoh, Yasunori
    JOURNAL OF CARDIAC FAILURE, 2015, 21 (10) : S171 - S171
  • [30] Selecting patients for heart transplantation: Comparison of the Heart Failure Survival Score (HFSS) and the Seattle Heart Failure Model (SHFM)
    Goda, Ayumi
    Williams, Paula
    Mancini, Donna
    Lund, Lars H.
    JOURNAL OF HEART AND LUNG TRANSPLANTATION, 2011, 30 (11): : 1236 - 1243