PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Racial differences and mortality risk in patients with heart failure and hyponatremia.

  • Jeremy A Miles,
  • Renato Quispe,
  • Yonatan Mehlman,
  • Kavisha Patel,
  • Claudia Lama Von Buchwald,
  • Jee Young You,
  • Seth Sokol,
  • Robert T Faillace

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218504
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 6
p. e0218504

Abstract

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BackgroundHyponatremia is a well-established poor prognostic marker in patients with heart failure. Whether the mortality risk is comparable among different races of patients with heart failure and hyponatremia is unknown.Materials and methodsConsecutive patients admitted with acute decompensated heart failure and an admission sodium levelResultsWe included 4,343 patients, from which 1,356 (31%) identified as white, 1,248 (29%) as African American, 780 (18%) as Hispanic and 959 (22%) as other. During a median follow-up of 23 months, a total of 2,384 patients died: 678 were African American, 820 were white, 298 were Hispanic and 588 were other. After adjusting for baseline demographics, comorbidities and medication use, Hispanic patients had a 45% less risk of death as compared to African Americans (HR .55, CI .48-.64, pConclusionHispanic patients admitted for heart failure and who were hyponatremic on admission had an independent lower risk of mortality compared to other groups. These findings may be due to the disparate activity of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system among various racial groups. This observational study is hypothesis generating and suggests that treatment of patients with heart failure and hyponatremia should perhaps be focused more on renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system reduction in certain racial groups, yet less in others.