Diagnostics (Feb 2024)

Casting Light on Early Heart Failure: Unveiling the Prognostic Potential of the E/(e′ × s′) Index

  • Ioana Ionac,
  • Mihai Andrei Lazar,
  • Teodora Hoinoiu,
  • Simina Crisan,
  • Silvius Alexandru Pescariu,
  • Ciprian Nicusor Dima,
  • Constantin Tudor Luca,
  • Cristian Mornos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14040409
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 4
p. 409

Abstract

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It has been shown that patients with NYHA class I and II have a high morbidity and mortality burden. We investigated the value of a new tissue Doppler index, E/(e′ × s′), to predict cardiac events in the long-term follow-up of patients at an early stage of heart failure (HF). Sequential echocardiography was conducted on a consecutive cohort of 212 hospitalized HF patients, pre-discharged and with three-month follow-up. The primary end point consisted of cardiac death or readmission due to HF worsening. During follow-up, cardiac events occurred in 99 patients (46.7%). The first cardiac event was represented by cardiac death in 8 patients (3.8%) and readmission for HF in 91 patients (42.9%). A Kaplan–Meier analysis did not show a significantly different event-free survival rate between patients with NYHA class I and II. The composite end point was significantly higher in patients with an E/(e′ × s′) >1.6. The E/(e′ × s′) at discharge was the best independent predictor of cardiac events. Those exhibiting an E/(e′ × s′) > 1.6 at discharge, with a subsequent deterioration after three months, displayed the poorest prognosis concerning cardiac events, HF-related rehospitalization, and cardiac mortality (all p 1.6 emerged as a robust predictor of clinical outcomes, especially when coupled with a deterioration in condition.

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