Digoxin treatment in heart failure--unveiling risk by cluster analysis of DIG
data.
Author(s): Ather S, Peterson LE, Divakaran VG, Deswal A, Ramasubbu K, Giorgberidze I,
Blaustein A, Wehrens XH, Mann DL, Bozkurt B.
Affiliation(s): Baylor College of Medicine, Houston TX, United States.
Publication date & source: 2011, Int J Cardiol. , 150(3):264-9
BACKGROUND: Digoxin has been shown to reduce heart failure (HF) hospitalizations
with no overall effect on mortality in HF patients. We used cluster analysis to
delineate the clinical characteristics of HF patients in whom digoxin therapy was
associated with improved or worsened clinical outcomes.
METHODS: The Digitalis Investigation Group (DIG) database was partitioned into 20
clusters. Multivariate Cox regression analyses was used, to identify clusters in
which digoxin was associated with either an increase (Mortality(dig)HR>1),
decrease (Mortality(dig)HR<1), or no association with all cause mortality
(Mortality(dig)HR-NS); and separately, with an increase (HFA(dig)HR>1), decrease
(HFA(dig)HR<1), or no association (HFA(dig)HR-NS) with HF admissions (HFA).
RESULTS: We identified 938 patients in the Mortality(dig)HR>1 group, 6818
patients in the Mortality(dig)HR-NS group, and none in Mortality(dig)HR<1 group.
The Mortality(dig)HR>1 group had a higher prevalence of females, diabetes
mellitus, hypertension, higher age, systolic blood pressure (SBP), heart rate and
ejection fraction (EF), compared to the Mortality(dig)HR-NS group. Similarly,
6325 patients clustered in the HFA(dig)HR<1 group, 1431 patients in the
HFA(dig)HR-NS group, and none in the HFA(dig)HR>1 group. The HFA(dig)HR-NS group
had a higher prevalence of females and hypertension, higher SBP, body mass index
and EF; and lower prevalence of peripheral edema and third heart sound, compared
with the HFA(dig)HR<1 group.
CONCLUSION: Thus, the baseline characteristics of patients who did not have
reduction in HF hospitalization or who had increased mortality were very similar
and included females with hypertension, higher EF and higher SBP. Thus, use of
digoxin in patients with this profile may need to be avoided.
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