Natriuretic Response Is Highly Variable and Associated With 6-Month Survival: Insights From the ROSE-AHF Trial.

Pubmed ID: 31047017

Pubmed Central ID: PMC6501816

Journal: JACC. Heart failure

Publication Date: May 1, 2019

Affiliation: Section of Cardiovascular Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut. Electronic address: jeffrey.testani@yale.edu.

Link: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213177919300289?via%3Dihub

MeSH Terms: Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Middle Aged, Proportional Hazards Models, Heart Failure, Prognosis, Survival Rate, Mortality, Acute Disease, Water-Electrolyte Balance, Sodium Potassium Chloride Symporter Inhibitors, Sodium, Water-Electrolyte Imbalance, Natriuresis

Grants: K23 HL114868, L30 HL115790, K23 DK097201, R01 HL128973, P30 DK079310, UL1 TR001863, R21 HL143092, T32 HL007950, R01 DK113191, R01 HL139629

Authors: Testani JM, Mullens W, Raghavendra P, Wilson FP, Ahmad T, Turner J, Tang WHW, Rao VS, Hodson DZ, Griffin M, Mahoney D, Collins SP

Cite As: Hodson DZ, Griffin M, Mahoney D, Raghavendra P, Ahmad T, Turner J, Wilson FP, Tang WHW, Rao VS, Collins SP, Mullens W, Testani JM. Natriuretic Response Is Highly Variable and Associated With 6-Month Survival: Insights From the ROSE-AHF Trial. JACC Heart Fail 2019 May;7(5):383-391.

Studies:

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This study sought to describe sodium excretion in acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) clearly and to evaluate the prognostic ability of urinary sodium and fluid-based metrics. BACKGROUND: Sodium retention drives volume overload, with fluid retention largely a passive, secondary phenomenon. However, parameters (urine output, body weight) used to monitor therapy in ADHF measure fluid rather than sodium balance. Thus, the accuracy of fluid-based metrics hinges on the contested assumption that urinary sodium content is consistent. METHODS: Patients enrolled in the ROSE-AHF (Renal Optimization Strategies Evaluation-Acute Heart Failure) trial with 24-h sodium excretion available were studied (n = 316). Patients received protocol-driven high-dose loop diuretic therapy. RESULTS: Sodium excretion through the first 24 h was highly variable (range 0.12 to 19.8 g; median 3.63 g, interquartile range: 1.85 to 6.02 g) and was not correlated with diuretic agent dose (r = 0.06; p = 0.27). Greater sodium excretion was associated with reduced mortality in a univariate model (hazard ratio: 0.80 per doubling of sodium excretion; 95% confidence interval: 0.66 to 0.95; p = 0.01), whereas gross urine output (p = 0.43), net fluid balance (p = 0.87), and weight change (p = 0.11) were not. Sodium excretion of less than the prescribed dietary sodium intake (2 g), even in the setting of a negative net fluid balance, portended a worse prognosis (hazard ratio: 2.02; 95% confidence interval: 1.17 to 3.46; p = 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: In patients hospitalized with ADHF who were receiving high-dose loop diuretic agents, sodium concentration and excretion were highly variable. Sodium excretion was strongly associated with 6-month mortality, whereas traditional fluid-based metrics were not. Poor sodium excretion, even in the context of fluid loss, portends a worse prognosis.