PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Prognostic value of heart rate variability in patients with coronary artery disease in the current treatment era.

  • Antti O Vuoti,
  • Mikko P Tulppo,
  • Olavi H Ukkola,
  • M Juhani Junttila,
  • Heikki V Huikuri,
  • Antti M Kiviniemi,
  • Juha S Perkiömäki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254107
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 7
p. e0254107

Abstract

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Coronary artery disease (CAD) mortality has declined substantially over the past decades thanks to advancing medical and interventional/surgical treatments; therefore, the prognostic value of the heart rate variability in CAD in the current treatment era is not well established. We evaluated the prognostic significance of baseline heart rate variability in 1,757 ARTEMIS study patients with angiographically verified CAD. During an average follow-up time of 8.7 ± 2.2 years, a total of 285 (16.2%) patients died. Of the patients, 63 (3.6%) suffered sudden cardiac death or were resuscitated from sudden cardiac arrest (SCD/SCA), 60 (3.4%) experienced non-sudden cardiac death (NSCD), and death attributable to non-cardiac causes (NCD) occurred in 162 (9.2%) patients. For every 10 ms decrease in standard deviation of normal to normal intervals the risk for SCD/SCA, NSCD and NCD increased significantly: HR 1.153 (95% CI 1.075-1.236, p<0.001), HR 1.187 (95% CI 1.102-1.278, p<0.001) and HR 1.080 (95% CI 1.037-1.125, p<0.001), respectively. The natural logarithm of the low-frequency component of the power spectrum and the short-term scaling exponent of the detrended fluctuation analysis also had significant association with all modes of death (p<0.001). After relevant adjustment, standard deviation of normal-to-normal intervals retained its association with NSCD and NCD (p<0.01), the natural logarithm of the low-frequency component of the power spectrum with all modes of death (p from <0.05 to <0.01), and the short-term scaling exponent of the detrended fluctuation analysis with SCD/SCA (p<0.05) and NCD (p<0.001). In conclusion, impairment of many measures of heart rate variability predicts mortality but is not associated with any specific mode of death in patients with stable CAD during the current treatment era, limiting the clinical applicability of heart rate variability to targeting therapy.