Discordance Between Severity of Heart Failure as Determined by Patient Report Versus Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing.

Pubmed ID: 34180246

Pubmed Central ID: PMC8403334

Journal: Journal of the American Heart Association

Publication Date: July 6, 2021

Affiliation: Division of Cardiology Department of Internal Medicine University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Dallas TX.

MeSH Terms: Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Middle Aged, Survival Analysis, Heart Failure, Cause of Death, Prognosis, Quality of Life, Self Report, Exercise Test, Internationality, Carbon Dioxide

Authors: Grodin JL, Pandey A, Drazner MH, Zhong L, Michelis KC, Toto K, Ayers CR, Thibodeau JT

Cite As: Michelis KC, Grodin JL, Zhong L, Pandey A, Toto K, Ayers CR, Thibodeau JT, Drazner MH. Discordance Between Severity of Heart Failure as Determined by Patient Report Versus Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing. J Am Heart Assoc 2021 Jul 6;10(13):e019864. Epub 2021 Jun 26.

Studies:

Abstract

Background Patient-reported outcomes may be discordant to severity of illness as assessed by objective parameters. The frequency of this discordance and its influence on clinical outcomes in patients with heart failure is unknown. Methods and Results In HF-ACTION (Heart Failure: A Controlled Trial Investigating Outcomes of Exercise Training), participants (N=2062) had baseline assessment of health-related quality of life via the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Clinical Summary score (KCCQ-CS) and objective severity by cardiopulmonary stress testing (minute ventilation [V<sub>E</sub>]/carbon dioxide production [VCO<sub>2</sub>] slope). We defined 4 groups by median values: 2 concordant (lower severity: high KCCQ-CS and low V<sub>E</sub>/VCO<sub>2</sub> slope; higher severity: low KCCQ-CS and high V<sub>E</sub>/VCO<sub>2</sub> slope) and 2 discordant (symptom minimizer: high KCCQ-CS and high V<sub>E</sub>/VCO<sub>2</sub> slope; symptom magnifier: low KCCQ-CS and low V<sub>E</sub>/VCO<sub>2</sub> slope). The association of group assignment with mortality was assessed in adjusted Cox models. Symptom magnification (23%) and symptom minimization (23%) were common. Despite comparable KCCQ-CS scores, the risk of all-cause mortality in symptom minimizers versus concordant-lower severity participants was increased significantly (hazard ratio [HR], 1.79; 95% CI, 1.27-2.50; <i>P</i>&lt;0.001). Furthermore, despite symptom magnifiers having a KCCQ-CS score 28 points lower (poorer QOL) than symptom minimizers, their risk of mortality was not increased (HR, 0.79; 95% CI, 0.57-1.1; <i>P</i>=0.18, respectively). Conclusions Severity of illness by patient report versus cardiopulmonary exercise testing was frequently discordant. Mortality tracked more closely with the objective data, highlighting the importance of relying not only on patient report, but also objective data when risk stratifying patients with heart failure.