4.5 Article

The prognostic impact of uric acid in acute heart failure according to coexistence of diabetes mellitus

Journal

NUTRITION METABOLISM AND CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES
Volume 31, Issue 12, Pages 3377-3383

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.numecd.2021.07.032

Keywords

Heart failure; Uric acid; Diabetes mellitus; Prognosis

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study found that elevated uric acid levels predicted higher mortality in acute heart failure patients with diabetes, but not in non-diabetic patients. Uric acid may play a different role in acute heart failure depending on the presence of diabetes.
Background and aims: Increased uric acid levels predict higher mortality in heart failure (HF) patients. Patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) appear to have increased xanthine oxidase activity. We aimed to study if the association between uric acid and mortality in acute HF was different according to the coexistence of DM. Methods and results: We studied a cohort of patients hospitalized due to acute HF in 2009-2010. Patients with no uric acid measurement upon admission were excluded from the analysis. Follow-up: 2 years; endpoint: all-cause mortality. Patients with elevated uric acid (>80.0 mg/ L) were compared with those with lower values. We used a multivariate Cox-regression analysis to assess the prognostic impact of uric acid (both continuous and categorical variable: cut-off 80.0 mg/L). The analysis was stratified according to coexistence of DM. We studied 569 acute HF patients, 44.6%male, mean age 76 years, 290 were diabetic. Median admission uric acid: 81.2 mg/L and 52.2%had uric acid >80.0 mg/L. Elevated uric acid predicted all-cause mortality in acute HF only in patients with DM. The multivariate-adjusted HR of 2-year mortality was 1.68 (95 % CI: 1.15-2.46) for diabetic HF patients with uric acid>80.0 mg/L compared to those with lower levels (p = 0.008) and 1.10 (95 % CI: 1.03-1.18) per each 10 mg/L increase in uric acid (p = 0.007). In non-diabetic HF patients, uric acid was not associated with mortality. Conclusions: Increased uric acid predicts ominous outcome in acute HF patients with diabetes, however, it is not prognostic associated in non-diabetics. Uric acid may play a different role in acute HF depending on DM status. (c) 2021 The Italian Diabetes Society, the Italian Society for the Study of Atherosclerosis, the Italian Society of Human Nutrition and the Department of Clinical Medicine and Surgery, Federico II University. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available