Digoxin reduces 30-day all-cause hospital admission in older patients with chronic systolic heart failure.
Pubmed ID: 23490060
Pubmed Central ID: PMC3926199
Journal: The American journal of medicine
Publication Date: Aug. 1, 2013
MeSH Terms: Humans, Male, Female, Aged, United States, Hospitalization, Treatment Outcome, Cardiotonic Agents, Digoxin, Heart Failure, Systolic, Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
Grants: R01 HL085561, R01-HL085561, R01 HL097047, R01-HL097047, R01-HL085561-S
Authors: White M, Ahmed A, Gheorghiade M, Filippatos GS, Anker SD, Fonarow GC, Aban IB, Allman RM, Fleg JL, Patel K, Bourge RC, McMurray JJ, Cleland JG, van Veldhuisen DJ, White-Williams C
Cite As: Bourge RC, Fleg JL, Fonarow GC, Cleland JG, McMurray JJ, van Veldhuisen DJ, Gheorghiade M, Patel K, Aban IB, Allman RM, White-Williams C, White M, Filippatos GS, Anker SD, Ahmed A. Digoxin reduces 30-day all-cause hospital admission in older patients with chronic systolic heart failure. Am J Med 2013 Aug;126(8):701-8. Epub 2013 Mar 12.
Studies:
- Digitalis Investigation Group (DIG)
- Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (SPRINT)
- Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial Primary Outcome Paper (SPRINT-POP) Data
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Heart failure is a leading cause of hospital admission and readmission in older adults. The new United States healthcare reform law has created provisions for financial penalties for hospitals with higher than expected 30-day all-cause readmission rates for hospitalized Medicare beneficiaries aged ≥65 years with heart failure. We examined the effect of digoxin on 30-day all-cause hospital admission in older patients with heart failure and reduced ejection fraction. METHODS: In the main Digitalis Investigation Group trial, 6800 ambulatory patients with chronic heart failure (ejection fraction ≤45%) were randomly assigned to digoxin or placebo. Of these, 3405 were aged ≥65 years (mean age, 72 years; 25% were women; 11% were nonwhite). The main outcome in the current analysis was 30-day all-cause hospital admission. RESULTS: In the first 30 days after randomization, all-cause hospitalization occurred in 5.4% (92/1693) and 8.1% (139/1712) of patients in the digoxin and placebo groups, respectively, (hazard ratio {HR} when digoxin was compared with placebo, 0.66; 95% confidence interval {CI}, 0.51-0.86; P=.002). Digoxin also reduced both 30-day cardiovascular (3.5% vs 6.5%; HR, 0.53; 95% CI, 0.38-0.72; P<.001) and heart failure (1.7 vs 4.2%; HR, 0.40; 95% CI, 0.26-0.62; P<.001) hospitalizations, with similar trends for 30-day all-cause mortality (0.7% vs 1.3%; HR, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.27-1.11; P=.096). Younger patients were at lower risk of events but obtained similar benefits from digoxin. CONCLUSIONS: Digoxin reduces 30-day all-cause hospital admission in ambulatory older patients with chronic systolic heart failure. Future studies need to examine its effect on 30-day all-cause hospital readmission in hospitalized patients with acute heart failure.