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Introduction: The positive effect of cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is demonstrated in younger and older patients. However, it is quite debated whether the beneficial effect is similarly maintained in both genders during follow-up. Aim: to determine if the improvement obtained after CR remained significant at 1-year follow-up in older population, testing the influence of gender on this outcome. Methods: All patients aged 75+ years consecutively referred to Cardiac Rehabilitation outpatient Unit at Careggi University Hospital were screened for eligibility. All patients attended a CR program, based on 5-day-per-week aerobic training sessions for 4 weeks and they were evaluated at the end of CR at 6 and 12 months of follow-up. Results: 361 patients with a mean age 80.6 ± 4.4 years with a complete 1-year follow-up were enrolled in the study, 87.5 % of them had an acute coronary event, and 27.6 % were females. The increase in exercise capacity at the end of CR and at 1-year follow-up was statistically significant (VO2 peak: +8.7 % in males p < 0.001, +8.5 % in females p < 0.001; distance walked at 6-min test: +7.3 % in males p < 0.001, +10.2 % in females p < 0.001, respectively); the trajectory of exercise improvement at 6 and 12 months of FU was similar in men and women without significant decrease (VO2 peak-ml/kg/min: CR discharge vs 1 year FU = 15.2 vs 15,0 p: NS; distance walked-meters: CR discharge vs 1 year FU = 445.5 vs 440.6, p: NS) from end of CR to 1-year. Conclusions: the improvement in exercise tolerance obtained with CR program is still maintained at 1-year FU without significant influence of gender in our very old population.
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BACKGROUND: Transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM) is associated with a progressive reduction of functional capacity. The progression of cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) parameters over time is still unknown. METHODS: In this study, 55 patients with ATTR-CM underwent 2 serial cardiologic evaluations and CPETs in a national referral center for cardiac amyloidosis (Careggi University Hospital, Florence). RESULTS: Forty-three patients (78%) had wild-type ATTR. Median age was 80 years (interquartile range [IQR] 76-83 years), and 50 of the patients (91%) were men. At baseline, median peak oxygen consumption (pVO2) was 15 mL/kg/min (IQR 12-18 mL/kg/min), percentage of predicted pVO2 (%ppVO2) was 71% (IQR 60%-83%) and VE/VCO2 slope was 31 (IQR 26-34). After a median follow-up of 14 months (IQR 13-16 months), pVO2, %ppVO2 and VE/VCO2 slope were significantly worsened (-1.29 mL/kg/min [95% confidence interval (CI): -1.85 to -0.74; P < 0.01], -4.5% [95% CI: -6.9 to -2.02; P < 0.01], and 8.6 [95% CI 6-11; P < 0.01], respectively). Furthermore, exercise time (-39 s, 95% CI: -59 to -19; P < 0.01), exercise tolerance (-0.47 metabolic equivalents, 95% CI: -0.69 to -0.2; P < 0.01), and peak systolic pressure (-10.8 mm Hg, 95% CI: -16.2 to -5.4; P < 0.01) were significantly reduced. The worsening in CPET variables did not correspond with a significant change in echocardiographic parameters. CONCLUSIONS: Cardiorespiratory response to exercise significantly worsened over a short period of time in patients with ATTR-CM. Serial CPET may be useful to identify early disease progression.
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Amiloidose , Teste de Esforço , Masculino , Humanos , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Feminino , Pré-Albumina , Estudos Retrospectivos , Ecocardiografia , Consumo de Oxigênio/fisiologiaRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Though renal impairment is highly prevalent in older patients and influence post-operative outcomes in cardiac surgery; its prognostic relevance is debated and not fully assessed by surgical risk scores. OBJECTIVE: We investigated the predictive role of estimated glomerular filtration rate formulas for in-hospital worsening renal function (WRF) after cardiac surgery. METHODS: We prospectively enrolled in single-center cohort study, patients aged ≥ 75 years candidate to elective cardiac surgery. Four creatinine-based equations were used to calculate estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) formulas: Cockroft-Gault, Modification of Diet in Renal Disease, Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology, and Berlin Initiative Study 1 formulas. Each patient underwent geriatric and clinical evaluation before surgery with calculation of the Society of Thoracic Surgeons scores. In-hospital WRF was defined as a composite of an increase in SCr ≥0.5 mg/dl or the occurrence of grade III KDIGO acute kidney injury. The association between each eGFR equation, alone and in models including clinical variables, and WRF was analyzed using logistic regressions and ROC analysis. RESULTS: WRF occurred in 69 patients (19.8%), and the predictors of WRF were previous acute myocardial infarction, hypertension, 4-mt gait speed performance, and preoperative eGFR, irrespective of the equation used. With all equations, inclusion of these additional variables in the logistic regression models improved the prediction of WRF (AUCs 0.798-0.810). CONCLUSIONS: An accurate assessment of renal function and of physical performance should be incorporated into cardiac surgery risk scores to improve prediction of in-hospital WRF and, hence, risk stratification in older adults undergoing elective cardiac surgery.
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Procedimentos Cirúrgicos Cardíacos , Infarto do Miocárdio , Insuficiência Renal Crônica , Humanos , Idoso , Taxa de Filtração Glomerular , Estudos de Coortes , Procedimentos Cirúrgicos Cardíacos/efeitos adversos , Rim/fisiologiaRESUMO
Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) improves clinical and functional recovery in older patients after acute cardiac syndromes, whose outcome is influenced by cardiac disease severity, but also by comorbidity and frailty. The aim of the study was to analyze the predictors of physical frailty improvement during the CR program. Data were collected in all patients aged > 75 years consecutively admitted from 1 January to December 2017 to our CR, consisting of 5-day-per-week of 30-min session of biking or calisthenics on alternate days for 4 weeks. Physical frailty was measured with short physical performance battery (SPPB) at the entry and the end of CR. Outcome was represented by an increase of at least 1 point in the SPPB score from baseline to the end of the CR program. In our study population of 100 patients, mean age 81 years, we demonstrated that a strong predictor of improvement in SPPB score was the poorer performance in the test at baseline; for Δ-1 point of score, we registered an OR 2.50 (95% CI = 1.64-3.85; p = 0.001) of probability to improve the physical performance at the end of CR. Interestingly those patients with worse performance at SPPB balance and chair standing task showed greater probability of ameliorating their physical frailty profile at the end of CR. Our data strongly suggest that CR program after acute cardiac syndrome produces a significant physical frailty improvement in those patients with worse frailty phenotype with an impairment in chair standing or balance at entry.
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Reabilitação Cardíaca , Fragilidade , Humanos , Fragilidade/diagnóstico , Recuperação de Função Fisiológica , Hospitalização , Desempenho Físico FuncionalRESUMO
The aim of this study is to evaluate the prognostic value of cardiopulmonary testing (CPET) in a cohort of patients with transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis (ATTR-CA). ATTR-CA is associated with a progressive reduction in functional capacity. The prognostic role of CPET parameters and in particular of normalized peak VO2 (%ppVO2) remains to be thoroughly evaluated. In this study, 75 patients with ATTR-CA underwent cardiological evaluation and CPET in a National Referral Center for cardiac amyloidosis (Careggi University Hospital, Florence). Fifty-seven patients (76%) had wild-type ATTR. Median age was 80 (75-83) years, 68 patients (91%) were men. Peak oxygen consumption (14.1 ± 4.1 ml/kg/min) and %ppVO2 (68.4 ± 18.8%) were blunted. Twenty-seven (36%) patients had an abnormal pressure response to exercise. After a median follow-up of 25 (12-31) months, the composite outcome of death or heart failure hospitalization was registered in 19 (25.3%) patients. At univariate analysis %ppVO2 was a stronger predictor for the composite outcome than peak VO2. %ppVO2 and NT-proBNP remained associated with the composite outcome at multivariate analysis. The optimal predictive threshold for %ppVO2 was 62% (sensitivity: 71%; specificity: 68%; AUC: 0.77, CI 0.65-0.88). Patients with %ppVO2 ≤ 62%and NT-proBNP > 3000 pg had a worse prognosis with 1- and 2-year survival of 69 ± 9% and 50 ± 10%, respectively. CPET is a safe and useful prognostic tool in patients with ATTR-CA. CPET may help to identify patients with advanced disease that may benefit from targeted therapy.
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Amiloidose , Insuficiência Cardíaca , Masculino , Humanos , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Feminino , Prognóstico , Teste de Esforço , Pré-Albumina , CoraçãoRESUMO
PURPOSE: Consensus exits about the clinical benefits of an early referral to multidisciplinary Heart Failure Unit-HFU for old frail patients with HF. Nevertheless, few data are present regarding the prognosis and the predictors of outcome in oldest-old patients managed in this clinical setting. The aim of present study is to identify predictors of 1-year all-cause mortality in very old patients enrolled in our multidisciplinary HFU after an episode of acute decompensated HF. METHODS: This study is a retro-prospective, single-center cohort analysis of patients managed in our multidisciplinary HFU. Inclusion criterion was diagnosis of HF according to ESC guidelines and age ≥ 85 years, while no exclusion criteria were pre-defined. Baseline clinical and comprehensive geriatric evaluations were recorded during the first visit and follow-up visits were repeated according to our standardized timetable protocol. Primary end-point was 1-year all-cause mortality. RESULTS: We enrolled 75 patients aged 89.2 ± 2.8 years; 39 (52.0%) were females. During 1-year follow-up, seventeen patients (22.7%) died. Residual congestion with higher level (> 4) of EVEREST score (HR 1.24: 95% CI 1.04-1.47) and living alone (HR 3.34: 95% CI 1.16-9.64) resulted the two independent predictors of 1-year all-cause mortality at the multivariate Cox regression model. Finally, patients living alone and with an EVEREST score > 4 experienced a worse prognosis as clearly described by a steeper descendent Kaplan-Meier curve. CONCLUSION: In a very old population of patients after an acute decompensated HF, residual congestion and social isolation as living alone identify those with high risk of 1-year death.
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Insuficiência Cardíaca , Idoso , Feminino , Humanos , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Masculino , Estudos Prospectivos , Insuficiência Cardíaca/diagnóstico , Insuficiência Cardíaca/epidemiologia , Insuficiência Cardíaca/terapia , Modelos de Riscos Proporcionais , Prognóstico , Progressão da DoençaRESUMO
BACKGROUND: The positive effect of cardiac rehabilitation (CR) on outcomes after acute coronary syndromes (ACS) is established. Nevertheless, enrollment rates into CR programs remain low, although ACS carry a high risk of functional decline particularly in the elderly. AIM: We aimed to determine if a multidisciplinary CR improves exercise capacity in an older population discharged after ACS systematically treated with PCI. METHODS: CR-AGE ACS is a prospective, single-center, cohort study. All patients aged 75+ years consecutively referred to Cardiac Rehabilitation outpatient Unit at Careggi University Hospital, were screened for eligibility. Moderate/severe cognitive impairment, disability in 2+ basic activities of daily living, musculoskeletal diseases, contraindication to Cardiopulmonary Exercise Test, and diseases with an expected survival < 6 months, were exclusion criteria. Participants attended a CR program, based on 5-day-per-week aerobic training sessions for 4 weeks. RESULTS: We enrolled 253 post-ACS patients with a mean age 80.6 ± 4.4 years. After CR, 136 (56.2%) 77 (31.3%) patients obtained, respectively, at least a moderate (∆+5%) or an optimal (∆+15%) increase in VO2peak. Baseline VO2peak (- 1 ml/kg/min: OR 1.18; 95% CI 1.09-1.28), the number of training sessions (+1 session: OR 1.07; 95% CI 1.01-1.15), and mild-to-moderate baseline disability (yes vs. no: OR 0.22; 95% CI 0.01-0.57) were the predictors of VO2peak changes. CONCLUSIONS: A CR program started early after discharge from ACS produces a significant increase in exercise capacity in very old patients with mild-to-moderate post-acute physical impairment. Baseline VO2peak, the number of training sessions, and the level of baseline disability are the independent predictors of improvement.
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Síndrome Coronariana Aguda , Reabilitação Cardíaca , Intervenção Coronária Percutânea , Atividades Cotidianas , Síndrome Coronariana Aguda/cirurgia , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Estudos de Coortes , Teste de Esforço , Terapia por Exercício , Tolerância ao Exercício , Humanos , Estudos ProspectivosRESUMO
INTRODUCTION: Prolonged hospital stay must be considered as risk factor for poor outcomes after cardiac surgery; different variables have been advocated as predictors of in-hospital stay. Nevertheless, most patients requiring prolonged hospital stay are frail older subjects; thus, we hypothesized a significant influence of pre-operative physical performance, as a frailty measure, on in-hospital stay after elective cardiac surgery. METHODS: In a prospective, single-center, cohort study we enrolled patients aged 75+ years referred to our Division of Cardiac Surgery at Careggi University Hospital, for their first elective cardiac surgery. All participants were preoperatively evaluated by a team composed by a cardiac surgeon, a cardiologist, an anaesthesist, and a geriatrician to assess global cardiac surgery risk; lower extremity performance was measured with the Short Physical Performance Battery-SPPB. RESULTS: A total of 518 patients were included in the study. Mean age was 79.5⯱â¯3.3â¯years; 256 (49.4%) were women. Isolated coronary by pass graft was performed in 37 patients (7.1%), isolated valve surgery in 115 (22.0%), and combined cardiac surgery procedures in 366 (70,9%). In a multivariable model, SPPB score was strongly associated with hospital length of stay both as continuous, categorized and dichotomous variable (pâ¯<â¯0.001; pâ¯=â¯0.002; pâ¯=â¯0.002 respectively) in all study population, and in subgroup of patients candidate to cardiac surgery considered by the Society of Thoracic Surgeons calculator score (pâ¯=â¯0.023; pâ¯=â¯0.056; pâ¯=â¯0.013 respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Our findings support the use of pre-operative SPPB evaluation before elective cardiac surgery based on the independent ability to predict length of hospital stay.
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Procedimentos Cirúrgicos Cardíacos , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Procedimentos Cirúrgicos Cardíacos/efeitos adversos , Estudos de Coortes , Feminino , Humanos , Tempo de Internação , Extremidade Inferior/cirurgia , Masculino , Complicações Pós-Operatórias/epidemiologia , Complicações Pós-Operatórias/etiologia , Estudos ProspectivosRESUMO
During earliest years, new drug-therapies and novel interventional therapies have been tested to modify the detrimental effect of secondary valve diseases, adverse ventricular remodelling and persistent fluid overload in HF patients. However, the increased prevalence of older or very old patients with HF has made their widespread implementation more problematic due to complex comorbidity, frailty, or overt disability. This growing older population, often excluded by randomized trials, but with elevated risk of hospitalization, required a different clinical and management approach that allows clinicians to take full advantage in reducing mortality and morbidity from these new pharmacological and instrumental therapies. In this perspective, the role of multidisciplinary Heart Team is mandatory for better define a correct decision-making process and tailoring the best pharmacological therapy in each patient and to program a continuum care in a post-acute phase of treatment. In addition, the possibility to plan multicentre registries of several complex cases evaluated by Heart Team could become a very important source of real world data to further refine indications and contraindications of different highly technological therapeutic approach, today based often on randomized clinical trials that do not represent faithfully the current clinical practice population.
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Insuficiência Cardíaca , Idoso , Comorbidade , Hospitalização , Humanos , Sistema de RegistrosRESUMO
Principles and processes of comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA) are increasingly being applied to subspecialties and subspecialty conditions, including cardiovascular patients (i.e., infective endocarditis; considerations of surgery or transcatheter aortic valve replacement, TAVR, for patients with aortic stenosis; vascular surgery) and postoperative mortality risk. In cardiovascular field CGA has mainly the aim to define ideal management according to the different typology of older adult patients (e.g., robust versus intermediate versus physical and cognitively disabled versus end-stage or dying), allowing physicians to select different therapeutic goals according to life expectancy; Aspect to be valued are by CGA are global health status and patient's decision-making capacity: CGA allows the individualized treatment definition and optimize the preprocedure condition.
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Estenose da Valva Aórtica , Doenças Cardiovasculares , Endocardite , Implante de Prótese de Valva Cardíaca , Substituição da Valva Aórtica Transcateter , Idoso , Valva Aórtica/cirurgia , Estenose da Valva Aórtica/complicações , Estenose da Valva Aórtica/cirurgia , Doenças Cardiovasculares/etiologia , Avaliação Geriátrica/métodos , Implante de Prótese de Valva Cardíaca/métodos , Humanos , Medição de Risco , Fatores de Risco , Resultado do TratamentoRESUMO
OBJECTIVE: Studies suggesting that vulnerability increased short-term mortality in older patients with COVID-19 enrolled hospitalized patients and lacked COVID-negative comparators. Aim of this study was to examine the relationship between frailty and 1-year mortality in older patients with and without COVID-19, hospitalized and nonhospitalized. DESIGN: Cohort study. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: Patients over 75 years old accessing the emergency departments (ED) were identified from the ED archives in Florence, Italy. METHODS: Vulnerability status was estimated with the Dynamic Silver Code (DSC). COVID-19 hospital discharges (HC+) were compared with non-COVID-19 discharges (HC-). Linkage with a national COVID-19 registry identified nonhospitalized ED visitors with (NHC+) or without COVID-19 (NHC-). RESULTS: In 1 year, 48.4% and 33.9% of 1745 HC+ and 15,846 HC- participants died (P < .001). Mortality increased from 27.5% to 64.0% in HC+ and from 19.9% to 51.1% in HC- across DSC classes I to IV, with HC+ vs HC- hazard ratios between 1.6 and 2.2. Out of 1039 NHC+ and 18,722 NHC- participants, 18% and 8.7% died (P < .001). Mortality increased from 14.2% to 46.7% in NHC+ and from 2.9% to 26% in NHC- across DSC; NHC+ vs NHC- hazard ratios decreased from 5.3 in class I to 2.0 in class IV. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: In hospitalized older patients, mortality increases with vulnerability similarly in the presence and in the absence of COVID-19. In nonhospitalized patients, vulnerability-associated excess mortality is milder in individuals with than in those without COVID-19. The disease reduces survival even when background risk is low. Thus, apparently uncomplicated patients deserve closer clinical monitoring than commonly applied.
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COVID-19 , Fragilidade , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Estudos de Coortes , Avaliação Geriátrica , Humanos , SARS-CoV-2RESUMO
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate 6-month risk stratification capacity of the newly developed TeleHFCovid19-Score for remote management of older patients with heart failure (HF) during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic. DESIGN: Monocentric observational prospective study. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: Older HF outpatients remotely managed during the first pandemic wave. METHODS: The TeleHFCovid19-Score (0-29) was obtained by an ad hoc developed multiparametric standardized questionnaire administered during telephone visits to older HF patients (and/or caregivers) followed at our HF clinic. Questions were weighed on the basis of clinical judgment and review of current HF literature. According to the score, patients were divided in progressively increasing risk groups: green (0-3), yellow (4-8), and red (≥9). RESULTS: A total of 146 patients composed our study population: at baseline, 112, 21, and 13 were classified as green, yellow, and red, respectively. Mean age was 81±9 years, and women were 40%. Compared to patients of red and yellow groups, those in the green group had a lower use of high-dose loop diuretics (P < .001) or thiazide-like diuretics (P = .027) and had reported less frequently dyspnea at rest or for basic activities, new or worsening extremity edema, or weight increase (all P < .001). At 6 months, compared with red (62.2%) and yellow patients (33.3%), green patients (8.9%) presented a significantly lower rate of the composite outcome of cardiovascular death and/or HF hospitalization (P < .001). Moreover, receiver operating characteristic curve analysis showed a high sensibility and specificity of our score at 6 months (area under the curve = 0.789, 95% CI 0.682-0.896, P < .001) with a score <4.5 (very close to green group cutoff) that identified lower-risk subjects. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: The TeleHFCovid19-Score was able to correctly identify patients with midterm favorable outcome. Therefore, our questionnaire might be used to identify low-risk chronic HF patients who could be temporarily managed remotely, allowing to devote more efforts to the care of higher-risk patients who need closer and on-site clinical evaluations.
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COVID-19 , Insuficiência Cardíaca , Telemedicina , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Feminino , Insuficiência Cardíaca/epidemiologia , Humanos , Pandemias , Prognóstico , Estudos Prospectivos , Medição de Risco , SARS-CoV-2RESUMO
Recently, transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) has emerged as established standard treatment for symptomatic severe aortic stenosis, providing an effective, less-invasive alternative to open cardiac surgery for inoperable or high-risk older patients. In order to assess the anticipated benefit of aortic replacement, considerable interest now lies in better identifying factors likely to predict outcome. In the elderly population frailty and medical comorbidities have been shown to significantly predict mortality, functional recovery and quality of life after transcatheter aortic valve replacement. Scientific literature focused on the three items will be discussed. High likelihood of futility is described in patients with severe chronic lung, kidney, liver disease and/or frailty. The addition of frailty components to conventional risk prediction has been shown to result in improved discrimination for death and disability following the procedure and identifies those individuals least likely to derive benefit. Several dedicated risk score have been proposed to provide new insights into predicted "futile" outcome. However, assessment of frailty according to a limited number of variables is not sufficient, while a multi-dimensional geriatric assessment significantly improves risk prediction. A multidisciplinary heart team that includes geriatricians can allow the customization of therapeutic interventions in elderly patients to optimise care and avoid futility.
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Estenose da Valva Aórtica , Fragilidade , Substituição da Valva Aórtica Transcateter , Idoso , Valva Aórtica/cirurgia , Idoso Fragilizado , Fragilidade/etiologia , Fragilidade/cirurgia , Humanos , Futilidade Médica , Qualidade de Vida , Medição de Risco , Fatores de Risco , Índice de Gravidade de Doença , Substituição da Valva Aórtica Transcateter/efeitos adversos , Resultado do TratamentoRESUMO
Over recent years, managing hypertension in older people has gained increasing attention, with reference to very old, frailer individuals. In these patients, hypertension treatment may be challenging due to a higher risk of hypotension-related adverse events which commonly overlaps with a higher cardiovascular risk. Additionally, frailer older adults rarely satisfy inclusion criteria of randomized clinical trials, which determines a substantial lack of scientific data. Although limited, available evidence suggests that the association between blood pressure and adverse outcomes significantly varies at advanced age according to frailty status. In particular, the negative prognostic impact of hypertension seems to attenuate or even revert in individuals with older biological age, e.g., patients with disability, cognitive impairment, and poor physical performance. Consequently, "one size does not fit all" and personalized treatment strategies are needed, customized to individuals' frailty and functional status. Similar to other cardiovascular diseases, hypertension management in older people should be characterized by a geriatric approach based on biological rather than chronological age and a geriatric comprehensive evaluation including frailty assessment is required to provide the most appropriate treatment, tailored to patients' prognosis and health care goals. The aim of this review was to illustrate the importance of a patient-centered geriatric approach to hypertension management in older people with the final purpose to promote a wider implementation of frailty assessment in routine practice.
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Fragilidade , Hipertensão , Idoso , Pressão Sanguínea , Idoso Fragilizado , Fragilidade/complicações , Avaliação Geriátrica , Humanos , Hipertensão/tratamento farmacológicoRESUMO
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common cardiac sustained arrhythmia, whose incidence and prevalence increase with age, representing a significant burden for health services in western countries. Older people contribute to most patients affected from AF. Although oral anticoagulant therapy represents the cornerstone for the prevention of ischemic stroke and its disabling consequences, several other interventions - including left atrial appendage occlusion (LAAO), catheter ablation (CA) of AF, and rhythm control strategy (RCS) - have proved to be potentially effective in reducing the incidence of AF-associated clinical complications. Scientific literature focused on the three items will be discussed. Practical treatment of older AF patients is presented, including approach and management of patients with geriatric syndromes, selection of the most appropriate individualized drug treatment, clinical indications, and potential clinical benefit of LAAO and CA in selected older AF patients. Older people carry the greatest burden of AF in real world practice. Within a shared decision-making process, the patient centered approach needs to be put in the context of a comprehensive assessment, in order to gain maximal net clinical benefit and avoid futility or harm.
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Apêndice Atrial , Fibrilação Atrial , Ablação por Cateter , Acidente Vascular Cerebral , Idoso , Anticoagulantes/uso terapêutico , Apêndice Atrial/cirurgia , Fibrilação Atrial/tratamento farmacológico , Fibrilação Atrial/terapia , Ablação por Cateter/efeitos adversos , Humanos , Acidente Vascular Cerebral/etiologia , Acidente Vascular Cerebral/prevenção & controle , Resultado do TratamentoRESUMO
Heart failure (HF) is a major public health concern, with a high prevalence in the older population. The majority of randomized clinical trials evaluating new emerging pharmacologic agents for HF (eg, angiotensin receptor-neprilysin inhibitors, sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors, intravenous iron for deficiency treatment, transthyretin stabilizers, soluble guanylate cyclase stimulators, cardiac myosin activators, and new potassium binders) have found positive results on various clinical outcomes, particularly in patients with reduced ejection fraction. These treatments might have an important role in the management of older patients as well. Nevertheless, trials demonstrating benefit of these drugs have involved patients significantly younger (on average, approximately 10 years) and fewer comorbidities than those commonly encountered in clinical practice. We describe the recent evidence regarding the newest HF drugs and their applicability to older individuals in terms of efficacy and safety, and we discuss their effects on outcomes particularly valuable to older patients, such as preservation of cognitive function, functional status, independence, and quality of life. Although available subgroup analyses seem to confirm efficacy and safety across the age spectrum for some of these drugs, their effects on older patients centered outcomes often have been neglected. Future HF trials should be designed to include older patients more representative of the real clinical practice, to overcome generalizability biases.
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Insuficiência Cardíaca , Preparações Farmacêuticas , Idoso , Antagonistas de Receptores de Angiotensina/uso terapêutico , Humanos , Qualidade de Vida , Volume SistólicoRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Administrative data show that acute heart failure (HF) patients are older than those enrolled in clinical registries and frequently admitted to non-cardiological settings of care. The purpose of this study was to describe clinical characteristics of old patients hospitalised for acute HF in Cardiology, Internal Medicine or Geriatrics wards. METHODS: Data came from ATHENA (AcuTe Heart failurE in advaNced Age) registry which included elderly patients (≥ 65 years) admitted to the above mentioned settings of care from December 1, 2014 to December 1, 2015. RESULTS: We enrolled 396 patients, 15.4% assigned to Cardiology, 69.7% to Internal Medicine, and 14.9% to a Geriatrics ward. Mean age was 83.5 ± 7.6 years (51.8% of patients ≥ 85 years) and was higher in patients admitted to Geriatrics (P < 0.001); more than half were females. Medical treatments did not differ significantly among settings of care (in a context of a low prescription rate of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitors) whereas significant differences were observed in comorbidity patterns and management guidelines recommendation adherence for decongestion evaluation with comparison of weight and N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide levels on admission and at discharge (both P = 0.035 and P < 0.001), echocardiographic evaluation ( P < 0.001) and follow-up visits planning ( P < 0.001), all higher in Cardiology. Mean in-hospital length of stay was 9 ± 5.9 days, significantly higher in Geriatrics (13.7 ± 6.5 days) and Cardiology (9.9 ± 6.7 days) compared to Internal Medicine (8 ± 5.2 days), P < 0.001. In-hospital mortality was 9.3%, resulting higher in Geriatrics (18.6%) and Cardiology (16.4%) than Internal Medicine (5.8%), P = 0.001. CONCLUSIONS: In elderly patients hospitalised for acute HF, clinical characteristics and management differ significantly according to the setting of admission.
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CardioPulmonary Exercise Test (CPET) is the gold standard to evaluate functional capacity in patients at high risk of heart failure (HF). Few studies with a limited number of subjects and conflicting results, analyzed the role of CPET in patients with systemic amyloidosis. Aims of our study were the assessment of the response to exercise in patients with Transthyretin amyloid (ATTR) cardiomyopathy (CA), and the correlation of clinical, biohumoral and echocardiographic parameters with CPET parameters, such as VO2 peak and VE/VCO2 slope. From February 2018 to March 2019, 72 cardiac ATTR patients were prospectively enrolled and underwent a complete clinical, biohumoral, echocardiographic and CPET assessment. All patients completed the exercise stress test protocol, without any adverse event. At CPET, they achieved a mean VO2 peak of 14 mL/Kg/min and a mean VE/VCO2 slope of 31. The blood pressure response to exercise was inadequate in 26 (36%) patients (flat in 25 and hypotensive in 1), while 49/72 patients (69%) showed an inadequate heart rate recovery. In multivariate analysis, s' tricuspidalic was the only independent predictor of VO2 peak, while in the two test models performed to avoid collinearity, both TAPSE and s' tricuspidalic were the strongest independent predictors of VE/VCO2 slope. Our data demonstrate the role of right ventricular function as an independent predictor of exercise capacity and ventilatory efficiency in ATTR. In CPET evaluation, a significant proportion of patients presented an abnormal arterial pressure response and heart rate variation to exercise.
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Neuropatias Amiloides Familiares/fisiopatologia , Cardiomiopatias/genética , Cardiomiopatias/fisiopatologia , Teste de Esforço , Tolerância ao Exercício , Disfunção Ventricular Direita/fisiopatologia , Idoso , Ecocardiografia , Feminino , Humanos , Itália , Masculino , Estudos Prospectivos , Ventilação PulmonarRESUMO
OBJECTIVE: Risk stratification of cardiac surgery patients is usually based on the Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) score, that has limited predictive value in older persons. We aimed assessing whether the Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB) improves, beyond the STS score, assessment of hospital prognosis in older patients undergoing elective cardiac surgery. METHODS: All patients aged 75+ years referred for elective cardiac surgery to Careggi University Hospital (Florence, Italy) from April 2013 to March 2017 were evaluated pre-operatively. Participants were classified according to the STS-Predicted Risk Of Mortality (STS-PROM): low (<4%), intermediate (4 to 8%), and high risk (>8%). Primary study outcomes were hospital mortality and STS-defined major morbidity. Length of hospital stay was an additional outcome. RESULTS: Out of 235 participants (females: 46.5%; mean age: 79.6 years), 144 (61.3%) were at low, 67 (28.5%) at intermediate and 24 (10.2%) at high risk, based on the STS-PROM. SPPB (mean±SEM) was 8.8 ± 0.2, 7.0 ± 0.5, and 6.0 ± 0.8 in participants at low, intermediate, and high risk, respectively (p<0.001). The primary outcome occurred in 62 participants (26.4%). In low-risk participants, the SPPB score predicted the primary endpoint (adjusted OR 0.77, 95% CI 0.66-0.89 per each point increase; p<0.001) controlling for STS-Major Morbidity or Operative Mortality (STS-MM) score. This result was not observed in the intermediate-high risk group. CONCLUSIONS: SPPB predicts mortality and major morbidity in older patients undergoing elective cardiac surgery, classified as low risk with the STS risk score. The SPPB, applied preoperatively, might improve risk stratification in older patients undergoing elective cardiac surgery.