Prospective study of heart rate variability and mortality in chronic heart failure: results of the United Kingdom heart failure evaluation and assessment of risk trial (UK …

J Nolan, PD Batin, R Andrews, SJ Lindsay… - Circulation, 1998 - Am Heart Assoc
J Nolan, PD Batin, R Andrews, SJ Lindsay, P Brooksby, M Mullen, W Baig, AD Flapan…
Circulation, 1998Am Heart Assoc
Background—Patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) have a continuing high mortality.
Autonomic dysfunction may play an important role in the pathophysiology of cardiac death in
CHF. UK-HEART examined the value of heart rate variability (HRV) measures as
independent predictors of death in CHF. Methods and Results—In a prospective study
powered for mortality, we recruited 433 outpatients 62±9.6 years old with CHF (NYHA
functional class I to III; mean ejection fraction, 0.41±0.17). Time-domain HRV indices and …
Background—Patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) have a continuing high mortality. Autonomic dysfunction may play an important role in the pathophysiology of cardiac death in CHF. UK-HEART examined the value of heart rate variability (HRV) measures as independent predictors of death in CHF.
Methods and Results—In a prospective study powered for mortality, we recruited 433 outpatients 62±9.6 years old with CHF (NYHA functional class I to III; mean ejection fraction, 0.41±0.17). Time-domain HRV indices and conventional prognostic indicators were related to death by multivariate analysis. During 482±161 days of follow-up, cardiothoracic ratio, SDNN, left ventricular end-systolic diameter, and serum sodium were significant predictors of all-cause mortality. The risk ratio for a 41.2-ms decrease in SDNN was 1.62 (95% CI, 1.16 to 2.44). The annual mortality rate for the study population in SDNN subgroups was 5.5% for >100 ms, 12.7% for 50 to 100 ms, and 51.4% for <50 ms. SDNN, creatinine, and serum sodium were related to progressive heart failure death. Cardiothoracic ratio, left ventricular end-diastolic diameter, the presence of nonsustained ventricular tachycardia, and serum potassium were related to sudden cardiac death. A reduction in SDNN was the most powerful predictor of the risk of death due to progressive heart failure.
Conclusions—CHF is associated with autonomic dysfunction, which can be quantified by measuring HRV. A reduction in SDNN identifies patients at high risk of death and is a better predictor of death due to progressive heart failure than other conventional clinical measurements. High-risk subgroups identified by this measurement are candidates for additional therapy after prescription of an ACE inhibitor.
Am Heart Assoc