ESC Heart Failure (Oct 2024)

Long‐term cognitive and brain morphologic changes in chronic heart failure: Results of the Cognition.Matters‐HF study

  • Jan Traub,
  • György Homola,
  • Caroline Morbach,
  • Roxanne Sell,
  • Dennis Göpfert,
  • Stefan Frantz,
  • Mirko Pham,
  • Guido Stoll,
  • Stefan Störk,
  • Anna Frey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ehf2.14909
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
pp. 3191 – 3199

Abstract

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Abstract Aims Cognitive impairment (CI) is a common, yet frequently unrecognized co‐morbidity in chronic heart failure (HF). We quantified trajectories of cognitive performance, brain volume, and related clinical outcome over a time course of 6 years. Methods and results The Cognition.Matters‐HF cohort study recruited patients with stable HF of any aetiology and severity. Beyond cardiological assessment, the workup included cognitive testing and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Of 148 recruited patients, 70% exhibited CI at baseline. During the median follow‐up time of 69 months (quartiles: 68, 70), indicators of HF severity remained essentially unaltered. CI was also stable, with the exception of intensity of attention, where age‐adjusted t‐scores decreased from 42 (38, 46) to 38 (34, 44; P < 0.001). Complete sets of four serial brain MRI scans were available in 47 patients (32% of total sample). Total brain volume shrank by 0.4% per year, from 1103 (1060, 1143) cm3 to 1078 (1027, 1117) cm3, which was within limits observed in non‐diseased ageing individuals. During follow‐up, 29 study participants (20%) died, and 26 (18%) were at least once hospitalized due to worsening HF. The presence of CI was not associated with overall (P = 0.290) or hospitalization‐free (P = 0.450) survival. Conclusions In patients with stable HF patients receiving guideline‐directed pharmacologic treatment and regular medical care, the presence of CI did not affect overall and hospitalization‐free 6‐year survival. The loss of brain parenchyma observed in patients with stable HF did not exceed that of normal ageing.

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