4.8 Article

Patterns of weight change preceding hospitalization for heart failure

Journal

CIRCULATION
Volume 116, Issue 14, Pages 1549-1554

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.690768

Keywords

heart failure; prognosis; disease management; epidemiology

Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [R01 HL080228, R01-HL080228] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIA NIH HHS [K23 AG030986-01A1, K23 AG030986, K24 AG021507, K24AG021507, K24 AG021507-07] Funding Source: Medline

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Background - Weight gain is used by disease-management programs as a marker of heart failure decompensation, but little information is available to quantify the relationship between weight change in patients with heart failure and the risk for imminent hospitalization. Methods and Results - We conducted a nested case-control study among patients with heart failure referred to a home monitoring system by managed care organizations. We matched 134 case patients with heart failure hospitalization to 134 control patients without heart failure hospitalization on the basis of age, sex, duration of home monitoring, heart failure severity, and baseline body weight. Compared with control patients, case patients experienced gradual weight gain beginning approximate to 30 days before hospitalization; changes in daily weight between case and control patients were statistically significant (P<0.001). Within the week before hospitalization, when weight patterns in case and control patients began to diverge more substantially, mean increases of more than 2 and up to 5 pounds, more than 5 and up to 10 pounds, and more than 10 pounds (relative to time of enrollment in the monitoring system) were associated with matched adjusted odds ratios for heart failure hospitalization of 2.77 (95% confidence interval 1.13 to 6.80), 4.46 (95% confidence interval 1.45 to 13.75), and 7.65 (95% confidence interval 2.22 to 26.39), respectively, compared with mean increases of 2 pounds or less. Conclusions - Increases in body weight are associated with hospitalization for heart failure and begin at least I week before admission. Daily information about patients' body weight identifies a high-risk period during which interventions to avert decompensated heart failure that necessitates hospitalization may be beneficial.

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