ESC Heart Failure (Aug 2022)

The EPICTER score: a bedside and easy tool to predict mortality at 6 months in acute heart failure

  • Miriam Romero‐Correa,
  • Prado Salamanca‐Bautista,
  • Amaia Bilbao‐González,
  • Raul Quirós‐López,
  • Maria Dolores Nieto‐Martín,
  • María Luisa Martín‐Jiménez,
  • José Luis Morales‐Rull,
  • Dolores Quiles‐García,
  • Adriana Gómez‐Gigirey,
  • Francesc Formiga,
  • Óscar Aramburu‐Bodas,
  • José Luis Arias‐Jiménez,
  • the EPICTER Investigators group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ehf2.13924
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
pp. 2348 – 2356

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Aims Estimating the prognosis in heart failure (HF) is important to decide when to refer to palliative care (PC). Our objective was to develop a tool to identify the probability of death within 6 months in patients admitted with acute HF. Methods and results A total of 2848 patients admitted with HF in 74 Spanish hospitals were prospectively included and followed for 6 months. Each factor independently associated with death in the derivation cohort (60% of the sample) was assigned a prognostic weight, and a risk score was calculated. The accuracy of the score was verified in the validation cohort. The characteristics of the population were as follows: advanced age (mean 78 years), equal representation of men and women, significant comorbidity, and predominance of HF with preserved ejection fraction. During follow‐up, 753 patients (26%) died. Seven independent predictors of mortality were identified: age, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, cognitive impairment, New York Heart Association class III–IV, chronic kidney disease, estimated survival of the patient less than 6 months, and acceptance of a palliative approach by the family or the patient. The area under the ROC curve for 6 month death was 0.74 for the derivation and 0.68 for the validation cohort. The model showed good calibration (Hosmer and Lemeshow test, P value 0.11). The 6 month death rates in the score groups ranged from 6% (low risk) to 54% (very high risk). Conclusions The EPICTER score, developed from a prospective and unselected cohort, is a bedside and easy‐to‐use tool that could help to identify high‐risk patients requiring PC.

Keywords