Kw. Dauterman et al., HEART-FAILURE ASSOCIATED WITH PRESERVED SYSTOLIC FUNCTION - A COMMON AND COSTLY CLINICAL ENTITY, The American heart journal, 135(6), 1998, pp. 310-319
Congestive heart failure (CHF) represents an enormous and growing clin
ical and epidemiologic problem. By current estimates more than 5 milli
on patients in the United States, or approximately 2% of the adult pop
ulation, are thought to have CHF, and 400,000 new cases are diagnosed
each year.(1-3) Heart failure is the primary discharge diagnosis in ap
proximately 1,000,000 hospital admissions each year, of which more tha
n 80% are in patients $5 years and older, making it the most. common c
ause of hospital admission in the Medicare population.(4) Over a 3- to
6-month period 20% to 50% of patients will be readmitted.(5) In 1991
the cost of these hospitalizations was $5.45 billion compared with $2.
24 billion for all types of cancer and $3.2 billion for myocardial inf
arction.(6) The 2-year mortality rate in patients with newly diagnosed
disease is 35%, and the 6-year mortality rate is 67% in women and 82%
in men.(7) To most physicians the typical image of the patient with C
HF is one of a dilated cardiomyopathy and low left ventricular ejectio
n fraction (LVEF). This is certainly the case when one is considering
the ''end stage'' or refractory patient, which is the focus of this su
pplement. Indeed, the first response to tile findings of normal or pre
served LVEF is to consider alternative diagnoses, occult valvular dise
ase, or silent ischemia. As an example of this focus on systolic dysfu
nction, patients with normal or even mildly depressed LVEF are rarely
considered for transplantation. Furthermore the large multicenter tria
ls that have defined the management of CHF have excluded patients with
LVEF >35% or 40% or, in the case of the V-HeFT study, lack of LV enla
rgement. This focus on systolic dysfunction has left many physicians c
onfused and uncomfortable in treating the patient with CHF and preserv
ed systolic function; it is also responsible for the dearth of data on
how to treat them. In recent years, however, there has been a growing
recognition of the magnitude and importance of this problem. Patients
with CHF and preserved systolic function ale surprisingly common, rep
resenting 20% to 50% of all patients with the diagnosis of CHF.(8-10)
Yet despite the frequency of this syndrome, we know relatively little
regarding its morbidity and mortality, how to diagnose it in a clinica
lly applicable manner, and how to manage and prevent it. This is indic
ated by the 22-page American College of Cardiology/American Heart Asso
ciation practice guidelines for the evaluation and management of heart
failure, which devote only one page to diastolic dysfunction.(9) Pati
ents with heart failure in the absence of systolic dysfunction were sp
ecifically excluded from the Agency for Health Care Policy and Researc
h guidelines, primarily because it was believed that available evidenc
e was inadequate to make recommendations for management.(11) Therefore
the goal of this article is to review the mechanisms, epidemiology, a
nd therapy of CHF with preserved systolic function and to paint out th
e important contribution of this syndrome to the total morbidity rate
and cost of heart failure.