Life (Nov 2022)

Impact of Pre-Existing History of Heart Failure on Patient Profile, Therapeutic Management, and Prognosis in Cardiogenic Shock: Insights from the FRENSHOCK Registry

  • Guillaume Schurtz,
  • Clément Delmas,
  • Margaux Fenouillet,
  • François Roubille,
  • Etienne Puymirat,
  • Laurent Bonello,
  • Guillaume Leurent,
  • Basile Verdier,
  • Bruno Levy,
  • Julien Ternacle,
  • Brahim Harbaoui,
  • Gerald Vanzetto,
  • Nicolas Combaret,
  • Benoît Lattuca,
  • Cedric Bruel,
  • Jeremy Bourenne,
  • Vincent Labbé,
  • Patrick Henry,
  • Éric Bonnefoy-Cudraz,
  • Nicolas Lamblin,
  • Gilles Lemesle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/life12111844
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 11
p. 1844

Abstract

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There is a large heterogeneity among patients presenting with cardiogenic shock (CS). It is crucial to better apprehend this heterogeneity in order to adapt treatments and improve prognoses in these severe patients. Notably, the presence (or absence) of a pre-existing history of chronic heart failure (CHF) at time of CS onset may be a significant part of this heterogeneity, and data focusing on this aspect are lacking. We aimed to compare CS patients with new-onset HF to those with worsening CHF in the multicenter FRENSHOCK registry. Altogether, 772 CS patients were prospectively included: 433 with a previous history of CHF and 339 without. Worsening CHF patients were older (68 +/− 13.4 vs. 62.7 +/− 16.2, p p p = 0.029). Our results emphasize the great heterogeneity of the patients presenting with CS. Worsening CHF patients had higher risk profiles, and this translated to a 30% increase in in-hospital all-cause mortality. The heterogeneity of this population prompts us to better determine the phenotype of CS patients to adapt their management.

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