4.5 Article

Differences in red blood cell mass profiles impact intravascular volume and outcome risk in chronic heart failure

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ESC HEART FAILURE
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -

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WILEY PERIODICALS, INC
DOI: 10.1002/ehf2.14309

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Heart failure; Red blood cell mass; Intravascular volume; Outcomes

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The aim of this study was to identify different red blood cell mass (RBCM) profiles and their impact on blood volume expansion and clinical outcomes in chronic heart failure. The researchers found that patients with RBCM excess had the best event-free survival, while patients with RBCM deficit had the poorest outcomes compared to those with normal RBCM.
AimsTo identify different red blood cell mass (RBCM) profiles, separate from haemoglobin concentrations, and their impact on blood volume expansion and clinical outcomes in chronic heart failure. Methods and resultsRBCM was measured at hospital discharge using standardized nuclear medicine indicator-dilution methodology in patients following diuretic treatment for clinical congestion. Individual RBCM phenotypes were prospectively identified and analysed for heart failure-related mortality or first rehospitalization over 1 year.Of 132 patients, 42 (32%) demonstrated normal RBCM, 36 (27%) RBCM deficit (true anaemia), and 54 (41%) RBCM excess (erythrocythemia). Dilutional 'anaemia' defined by haemoglobin <12 g/dL with normal or an excess in RBCM with plasma volume expansion was identified in 37 (28%) patients. There were 61 composite outcome events, which included 38 deaths (29% of cohort) occurring over the 1 year follow-up period [14/36 (39%) in RBCM deficit, 12/42 (29%) in normal RBCM, and 12/54 (22%) in RBCM excess subgroups]. By Kaplan-Meier and multivariate analyses, RBCM excess was independently associated with the best event-free survival while RBCM deficit (true anaemia) the poorest outcomes; both compared with normal RBCM (P < 0.001). Dilutional 'anaemia' demonstrated a lower risk compared with true anaemia (P = 0.03). ConclusionsMarkedly different RBCM profiles are identifiable among comparably compensated heart failure patients, and this variability carries significant implications for post-hospital outcomes. Novel to this analysis and in contrast to RBCM deficit is the independent association of RBCM excess with better event-free survival compared with normal RBCM. The distinction of RBCM profiles to guide risk stratification and individualized patient management strategies warrants further study.

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