Revista espanola de cardiologia | 2019
Acute Heart Failure Risk Stratification in the Emergency Department: Are We There Yet?
Abstract
Imagine you are working in a busy emergency department (ED). You just finished caring for an elderly woman with acute heart failure (AHF). She feels better and requests to go home. Do you send her home? Do you admit her? What do you do? AHF is a global public health burden. In the United States, an estimated 5.7 million Americans have heart failure (HF), and 915 000 cases are newly diagnosed each year. For patients older than 65 years, AHF is the most common reason for hospitalization and rehospitalization.Nearly 80% of all patients who present to the ED with AHF will be hospitalized. Already, over 100 billion US dollars annually is consumed by the cost of HF worldwide. As the population ages and patients live longer with cardiovascular disease, the burden of AHF will continue to grow. Why are so many patients hospitalized? Emergency physicians tend to be risk-averse and AHF patients have high rates of morbidity and mortality. Within 30 days postdischarge, nearly one-third of patients die or are rehospitalized. Factors contributing to these high admission rates are older age, a high comorbid burden, and the absence of a past physician-patient relationship. Not knowing what is ‘baseline’ for a given patient; there is no way to compare a patient to his or her prior self. Does the patient look better, worse, or the same today as 30 days ago? This highlights the need for risk stratification. Risk stratification instruments for AHF have been developed in multiple countries. These instruments attempt to discriminate low vs high risk, in an effort to determine which patients with AHF can be safely discharged early. However, their limitations significantly affect their feasibility and applicability in the ED setting. Thus, they have not been widely adopted. As a result, current medical decision-making regarding ED disposition is largely based on clinician gestalt, combined with the absence of higher risk features. One risk-instrument of note is the brilliantly named MEESSI (Multiple Estimation of risk based on the Spanish Emergency Department Score in patients with AHF) score. The MEESSI score was developed to risk stratify AHF patients in Spanish EDs. This score predicted 30-day mortality risk in hospitalized patients using 13 variables, demonstrating excellent discrimination (c-statistic 0.836) for the derivation cohort. These 13 variables included the Barthel index at admission, systolic blood pressure, respiratory rate, age, NT-proBNP level, potassium, troponin, creatinine, New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class at admission, low output symptoms (ie, confusion, weakness, poor peripheral perfusion, oliguria), oxygen saturation, episodes associated with acute coronary syndrome, and ECG with hypertrophy. In an article recently published in Revista Española de Cardiologı́a, Miró et al. set out to further validate their derived risk score. They conducted a prospective observational validation study, enrolling 4711 consecutive patients with AHF from 30 Spanish EDs. Of note, they included hospitals not participating in the original derivation study. The only exclusion criterion consisted of patients with STsegment elevation myocardial infarction. The MEESSI score risk stratified patients into low, intermediate, high, and very high risk. In this validation cohort, 10% of patients died within 30 days of ED admission, a mortality rate consistent with other ‘real-world’ analyses. When stratified by risk group, 30-day mortality was 2.0%, 7.8%, 17.9%, and 41.4%, respectively, from low, intermediate, high, and very high risk. The score demonstrated strong risk discrimination with a c-statistic of 0.810 (95% confidence interval, 0.790-0.830; P < .001). With these impressive results, we are left wondering whether the MEESSI score is ready for everyday use. The large sample size, number of hospitals, and broad demographic characteristics support its generalizability, at least for Spanish EDs. Several baseline characteristics are worth highlighting, namely the high proportion of patients with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) as well as a first episode of AHF. Overall, hospitalized HFpEF patients have better outcomes. This is debated, however, with several studies showing no differences. However, in the study by Miró et al., the relatively low proportions of guideline-directed medical therapy suggest that this is due to the large number of HFpEF patients. Nevertheless, the guideline adherence rate was not mentioned stratified by ejection fraction. Thus, its potential impact on outcomes, despite robust adjustment, is uncertain. This adherence rate is probably also influenced by the > 40% of patients with a first episode of AHF. Whether these are chronic HF patients with their first AHF episode or their very first diagnosis of HF is unknown. In the United States, de novo AHF patients–HF for the very first time–are generally recommended to Rev Esp Cardiol. 2019;72(3):190–191