Treatment patterns, outcomes and healthcare resource utilization of obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in England

IF 3.7 2区 医学 Q2 CARDIAC & CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEMS ESC Heart Failure Pub Date : 2025-02-12 DOI:10.1002/ehf2.15213
Faizel Osman, Carla L. Zema, Michael Hurst, Belinda Sandler, Florence Brellier, Ovie Utuama, Oksana Kirichek, John Houghton, Teresa Lemmer, Maite Tome Esteban
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Abstract

Aims

Describe patient characteristics, treatment patterns, clinical outcomes, healthcare resource utilization (HCRU) and medical costs associated with patients who were diagnosed with obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) in clinical practice in England.

Methods and results

This observational, retrospective, cohort study of adults who were diagnosed with obstructive HCM in routine clinical practice in England used electronic health records from Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD) GOLD/Aurum and linked Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) databases (1 April 2007 to 30 October 2020). Adults (≥18 years at index date) with at least one diagnosis code (ICD-10, Read, SNOMED, or OPCS) indicative of HCM with ≥1 year of continuous registration in CPRD, data of acceptable research quality and eligibility for HES linkage were included. Outcomes from the obstructive HCM cohort were stratified by New York Heart Association (NYHA) class at baseline and during follow-up. Owing to the paucity of NYHA coding, patients with obstructive HCM and no record of NYHA class were assigned a proxy NYHA classification using an algorithm that considered patient symptoms and treatments. The study included 6440 patients in the overall HCM cohort with a mean follow-up duration of 4.84 [standard deviation (SD): 2.95] years. The study population was predominantly male (61.9%) and white (79.1%), with a mean (SD) age of 61.02 (15.61) years. The proportion of patients with obstructive HCM who had a pre-specified prior medical condition relevant to understanding disease burden increased with higher NYHA class (66.5% vs. 83.0% for NYHA class I and NYHA class II+, respectively), as did the proportion of patients with at least one baseline active prescription for cardiovascular-related medication. Among patients with at least one record of a prescription for the treatment of symptomatic obstructive HCM, 41.7% experienced a treatment change during the follow-up period. Atrial fibrillation or flutter, ischaemic stroke and heart failure were the most observed clinical events among patients in the obstructive HCM cohort, and the first in-study incidence of these events increased with higher NYHA class. Total HCRU costs per patient-year increased from £3033 to £4517 for NYHA classes I and II+, respectively, with secondary care costs consistently being the main driver in the obstructive HCM cohort.

Conclusions

Obstructive HCM is associated with a large clinical and economic burden in England, and this burden increases with higher NYHA class. These findings support the need for new and more effective strategies for the management of HCM.

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英国阻塞性肥厚性心肌病的治疗模式、结果和医疗资源利用
目的:描述英国临床实践中被诊断为阻塞性肥厚性心肌病(HCM)的患者特征、治疗模式、临床结果、医疗资源利用(HCRU)和医疗费用。方法和结果:这项观察性、回顾性、队列研究使用来自临床实践研究数据链(CPRD) GOLD/Aurum和相关医院事件统计(HES)数据库的电子健康记录(2007年4月1日至2020年10月30日),对在英格兰常规临床实践中被诊断为阻塞性HCM的成年人进行了研究。纳入至少有一个诊断代码(ICD-10, Read, SNOMED或OPCS)指示HCM的成人(索引日期≥18岁),在CPRD连续注册≥1年,研究质量可接受的数据和HES关联资格。在基线和随访期间,梗阻性HCM队列的结果按纽约心脏协会(NYHA)分级进行分层。由于缺乏NYHA编码,没有NYHA分类记录的阻塞性HCM患者使用考虑患者症状和治疗的算法分配代理NYHA分类。该研究纳入了整个HCM队列中的6440例患者,平均随访时间为4.84年[标准差(SD): 2.95]年。研究人群以男性(61.9%)和白人(79.1%)为主,平均(SD)年龄为61.02(15.61)岁。患有阻塞性HCM的患者中,有预先规定的与了解疾病负担相关的医疗状况的比例随着NYHA等级的升高而增加(分别为66.5% vs. NYHA I级和NYHA II+级的83.0%),至少有一种基线心血管相关药物的有效处方的患者比例也是如此。在至少有一次治疗症状性阻塞性HCM的处方记录的患者中,41.7%的患者在随访期间经历了治疗改变。房颤或颤振、缺血性脑卒中和心力衰竭是梗阻性HCM队列中观察最多的临床事件,且研究中这些事件的首次发生率随着NYHA分级的升高而增加。NYHA I级和II+级的HCRU总费用分别从每位患者每年3033英镑增加到4517英镑,二级护理费用一直是阻塞性HCM队列的主要驱动因素。结论:在英国,阻塞性HCM与巨大的临床和经济负担相关,并且这种负担随着NYHA等级的升高而增加。这些发现支持需要新的和更有效的策略来管理HCM。
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来源期刊
ESC Heart Failure
ESC Heart Failure Medicine-Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
7.90%
发文量
461
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: ESC Heart Failure is the open access journal of the Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology dedicated to the advancement of knowledge in the field of heart failure. The journal aims to improve the understanding, prevention, investigation and treatment of heart failure. Molecular and cellular biology, pathology, physiology, electrophysiology, pharmacology, as well as the clinical, social and population sciences all form part of the discipline that is heart failure. Accordingly, submission of manuscripts on basic, translational, clinical and population sciences is invited. Original contributions on nursing, care of the elderly, primary care, health economics and other specialist fields related to heart failure are also welcome, as are case reports that highlight interesting aspects of heart failure care and treatment.
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