Hypochloraemia is strongly and independently associated with mortality in patients with chronic heart failure.

Pubmed ID: 26763893

Pubmed Central ID: PMC5471359

Journal: European journal of heart failure

Publication Date: June 1, 2016

Affiliation: Program of Applied Translational Research, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.

MeSH Terms: Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Risk Factors, Middle Aged, Proportional Hazards Models, Chronic Disease, Heart Failure, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Renal Insufficiency, Linear Models, Sodium Potassium Chloride Symporter Inhibitors, Sodium, Hyponatremia, Chlorides, Water-Electrolyte Imbalance

Grants: K23 HL114868, L30 HL115790, K23 HL128933, K23 DK097201

Authors: Testani JM, Brisco MA, Tang WH, Parikh CR, Bellumkonda L, Jacoby D, Hanberg JS, Arroyo JP, Ter Maaten JM, Wilson FP

Cite As: Testani JM, Hanberg JS, Arroyo JP, Brisco MA, Ter Maaten JM, Wilson FP, Bellumkonda L, Jacoby D, Tang WH, Parikh CR. Hypochloraemia is strongly and independently associated with mortality in patients with chronic heart failure. Eur J Heart Fail 2016 Jun;18(6):660-8. Epub 2016 Jan 13.

Studies:

Abstract

AIMS: Hyponatraemia is strongly associated with adverse outcomes in heart failure. However, accumulating evidence suggests that chloride may play an important role in renal salt sensing and regulation of neurohormonal and sodium-conserving pathways. Our objective was to determine the prognostic importance of hypochloraemia in patients with heart failure. METHODS AND RESULTS: Patients in the BEST trial with baseline serum chloride values were evaluated (n = 2699). Hypochloraemia was defined as a serum chloride ≤96 mmol/L and hyponatraemia as serum sodium ≤135 mmol/L. Hypochloraemia was present in 13.0% and hyponatraemia in 13.7% of the population. Chloride and sodium were only modestly correlated (r = 0.53), resulting in only 48.7% of hypochloraemic patients having concurrent hyponatraemia. Both hyponatraemia and hypochloraemia identified a population with greater disease severity; however, renal function tended to be worse and loop diuretic doses higher with hypochloraemia. In univariate analysis, lower serum sodium or serum chloride as continuous parameters were each strongly associated with mortality (P < 0.001). However, when both parameters were included in the same model, serum chloride remained strongly associated with mortality [hazard ratio (HR) 1.3 per standard deviation decrease, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.18-1.42, P < 0.001], whereas sodium was not (HR 0.97 per standard deviation decrease, 95% CI 0.89-1.06, P = 0.52). CONCLUSION: Serum chloride is strongly and independently associated with worsened survival in patients with chronic heart failure and accounted for the majority of the risk otherwise attributable to hyponatraemia. Given the critical role of chloride in a number of regulatory pathways central to heart failure pathophysiology, additional research is warranted in this area.