Association of heart failure and its comorbidities with loss of life expectancy

Heart. 2021 Sep;107(17):1417-1421. doi: 10.1136/heartjnl-2020-317833. Epub 2020 Nov 5.

Abstract

Objective: Estimating survival can aid care planning, but the use of absolute survival projections can be challenging for patients and clinicians to contextualise. We aimed to define how heart failure and its major comorbidities contribute to loss of actuarially predicted life expectancy.

Methods: We conducted an observational cohort study of 1794 adults with stable chronic heart failure and reduced left ventricular ejection fraction, recruited from cardiology outpatient departments of four UK hospitals. Data from an 11-year maximum (5-year median) follow-up period (999 deaths) were used to define how heart failure and its major comorbidities impact on survival, relative to an age-sex matched control UK population, using a relative survival framework.

Results: After 10 years, mortality in the reference control population was 29%. In people with heart failure, this increased by an additional 37% (95% CI 34% to 40%), equating to an additional 2.2 years of lost life or a 2.4-fold (2.2-2.5) excess loss of life. This excess was greater in men than women (2.4 years (2.2-2.7) vs 1.6 years (1.2-2.0); p<0.001). In patients without major comorbidity, men still experienced excess loss of life, while women experienced less and were non-significantly different from the reference population (1 year (0.6-1.5) vs 0.4 years (-0.3 to 1); p<0.001). Accrual of comorbidity was associated with substantial increases in excess lost life, particularly for diabetes, chronic kidney and lung disease.

Conclusions: Comorbidity accounts for the majority of lost life expectancy in people with heart failure. Women, but not men, without comorbidity experience survival close to reference controls.

Keywords: heart failure; heart failure with reduced ejection fraction.

Publication types

  • Observational Study
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Comorbidity
  • Diabetes Mellitus / epidemiology*
  • Female
  • Heart Failure, Systolic* / diagnosis
  • Heart Failure, Systolic* / mortality
  • Humans
  • Life Expectancy*
  • Lung Diseases / epidemiology*
  • Male
  • Prognosis
  • Renal Insufficiency, Chronic / epidemiology*
  • Sex Factors
  • Survival Analysis
  • United Kingdom / epidemiology