@article{LiuHuLauetal.2021, author = {Liu, Dan and Hu, Kai and Lau, Kolja and Kiwitz, Tobias and Robitzkat, Katharina and Hammel, Clara and Lengenfelder, Bj{\"o}rn Daniel and Ertl, Georg and Frantz, Stefan and Nordbeck, Peter}, title = {Impact of diastolic dysfunction on outcome in heart failure patients with mid-range or reduced ejection fraction}, series = {ESC Heart Failure}, volume = {8}, journal = {ESC Heart Failure}, number = {4}, doi = {10.1002/ehf2.13352}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-258894}, pages = {2802-2815}, year = {2021}, abstract = {Aims The role of diastolic dysfunction (DD) in prognostic evaluation in heart failure (HF) patients with impaired systolic function remains unclear. We investigated the impact of echocardiography-defined DD on survival in HF patients with mid-range (HFmrEF, EF 41-49\%) and reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF, EF < 40\%). Methods and results A total of 2018 consecutive hospitalized HF patients were retrospectively included and divided in two groups based on baseline EF: HFmrEF group (n = 951, aged 69 ± 13 years, 74.2\% male) and HFrEF group (n = 1067, aged 68 ± 13 years, 76.3\% male). Clinical data were collected and analysed. All patients completed ≥1 year clinical follow-up. The primary endpoint was defined as all-cause death (including heart transplantation) and cardiovascular (CV)-related death. All-cause mortality (30.8\% vs. 24.9\%, P = 0.003) and CV mortality (19.1\% vs. 13.5\%, P = 0.001) were significantly higher in the HFrEF group than the HFmrEF group during follow-up [median 24 (13-36) months]. All-cause mortality increased in proportion to DD severity (mild, moderate, and severe) in either HFmrEF (17.1\%, 25.4\%, and 37.0\%, P < 0.001) or HFrEF (18.9\%, 30.3\%, and 39.2\%, P < 0.001) patients. The risk of all-cause mortality [hazard ratio (HR) = 1.347, P = 0.015] and CV mortality (HR = 1.508, P = 0.007) was significantly higher in HFrEF patients with severe DD compared with non-severe DD after adjustment for identified clinical and echocardiographic covariates. For HFmrEF patients, severe DD was independently associated with increased all-cause mortality (HR = 1.358, P = 0.046) but not with CV mortality (HR = 1.155, P = 0.469). Conclusions Echocardiography-defined severe DD is independently associated with increased all-cause mortality in patients with HFmrEF and HFrEF.}, language = {en} }