Heart failure medication dosage and survival in women and men seen at outpatient clinics

Publication date

2021-11-01

Authors

Bots, Sophie H.
Onland-Moret, N. CharlotteORCID 0000-0002-2360-913XISNI 0000000392818805
Tulevski, Igor I.
van der Harst, PimORCID 0000-0002-2713-686X
Cramer, Maarten JISNI 0000000390984527
Asselbergs, Folkert WORCID 0000-0002-1692-8669ISNI 0000000391548591
Somsen, G. Aernout
den Ruijter, Hester M.ORCID 0000-0001-9762-014XISNI 0000000392927067

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Document Type

Article

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License

cc_by_nc

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Women with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) may reach optimal treatment effect at half of the guideline-recommended medication dose. This study investigates prescription practice and its relation with survival of patients with HF in daily care. METHODS: Electronic health record data from 13 Dutch outpatient cardiology clinics were extracted for HF receiving at least one guideline-recommended HF medication. Dose changes over consecutive prescriptions were modelled using natural cubic splines. Inverse probability-weighted Cox regression was used to assess the relationship between dose (reference≥50% target dose) and all-cause mortality. RESULTS: The study population comprised 561 women (29% HFrEF (ejection fraction (EF)<40%), 49% heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (EF≥50%); HFpEF and 615 men (47% and 25%, respectively). During a median follow-up of 3.7 years, 252 patients died (48% women; 167 HFrEF, 84 HFpEF). Nine hundred thirty-four patients (46% women) received ACE inhibitors (ACEIs) or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs), 795 (48% women) beta blockers and 178 (42% women) mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists (MRAs). In both sexes, the mean target dose across prescriptions was 50% for ACEI/ARBs and beta blockers, and 100% for MRAs. ACEI/ARB dose of <50% was associated with lower mortality in women but not in men with HFrEF. This was not seen in patients with HFpEF. Beta-blocker dose was not associated with all-cause mortality. CONCLUSION: Patients with HF seen in outpatient cardiology clinics receive half of the guideline-recommended medication dose. Lower ACEI/ARB dose was associated with improved survival in women with HFrEF. These results underscore the importance of (re)defining optimal medical therapy for women with HFrEF.

Keywords

electronic health records, epidemiology, heart failure, Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

Citation

Bots, S H, Onland-Moret, N C, Tulevski, I I, Van Der Harst, P, Cramer, M J M, Asselbergs, F W, Somsen, G A & Den Ruijter, H M 2021, 'Heart failure medication dosage and survival in women and men seen at outpatient clinics', Heart, vol. 107, no. 21, pp. 1748-1755. https://doi.org/10.1136/heartjnl-2021-319229