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Cardiogenic Shock From Heart Failure Versus Acute Myocardial Infarction: Clinical Characteristics, Hospital Course, and 1-Year Outcomes

Shashank S. Sinha, Carolyn Rosner, Behnam Tehrani, Aneel Maini, Alexander G. Truesdell, Seiyon Ben Lee, Pramita Bagchi, James D. Cameron, Abdulla A. Damluji, Mehul Desai, Shashank Desai, Kelly Epps, Christopher R. deFilippi, M. Casey Flanagan, Leonard Genovese, Hala Moukhachen, James J Park, Mitchell A. Psotka, Anika Raja, Palak Shah, Matthew W. Sherwood, Ramesh Singh, Daniel Tang, Karl Young, Timothy Welch, Christopher M. O’Connor, Wayne Batchelor

2022Circulation Heart Failure118 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Little is known about clinical characteristics, hospital course, and longitudinal outcomes of patients with cardiogenic shock (CS) related to heart failure (HF-CS) compared to acute myocardial infarction (AMI; CS related to AMI [AMI-CS]). Methods: We examined in-hospital and 1-year outcomes of 520 (219 AMI-CS, 301 HF-CS) consecutive patients with CS (January 3, 2017–December 31, 2019) in a single-center registry. Results: Mean age was 61.5±13.5 years, 71% were male, 22% were Black patients, and 63% had chronic kidney disease. The HF-CS cohort was younger (58.5 versus 65.6 years, P <0.001), had fewer cardiac arrests (15.9% versus 35.2%, P <0.001), less vasopressor utilization (61.8% versus 82.2%, P <0.001), higher pulmonary artery pulsatility index (2.14 versus 1.51, P <0.01), lower cardiac power output (0.64 versus 0.77 W, P <0.01) and higher pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (25.4 versus 22.2 mm Hg, P <0.001) than patients with AMI-CS. Patients with HF-CS received less temporary mechanical circulatory support (34.9% versus 76.3% P <0.001) and experienced lower rates of major bleeding (17.3% versus 26.0%, P= 0.02) and in-hospital mortality (23.9% versus 39.3%, P <0.001). Postdischarge, 133 AMI-CS and 229 patients with HF-CS experienced similar rates of 30-day readmission (19.5% versus 24.5%, P =0.30) and major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events (23.3% versus 28.8%, P =0.45). Patients with HF-CS had lower 1-year mortality (n=123, 42.6%) compared to the patients with AMI-CS (n=110, 52.9%, P =0.03). Cumulative 1-year mortality was also lower in patients with HF-CS (log-rank test, P =0.04). Conclusions: Patients with HF-CS were younger, and despite lower cardiac power output and higher pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, less likely to receive vasopressors or temporary mechanical circulatory support. Although patients with HF-CS had lower in-hospital and 1-year mortality, both cohorts experienced similarly high rates of postdischarge major adverse cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events and 30-day readmission, highlighting that both cohorts warrant careful long-term follow-up. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov ; Unique identifier: NCT03378739.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCardiogenic shockMyocardial infarctionInternal medicineCardiologyHeart failurePulmonary wedge pressureCardiac indexEjection fractionBlood pressureHeart rateMechanical Circulatory Support DevicesAcute Myocardial Infarction ResearchHeart Failure Treatment and Management