Association of neighborhood median income to outcomes in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.

Raoul R Wadhwa, Rohan M Desai, Shilpa Rao, Ala Alashi, Bo Xu, Susan Ospina, Nicholas G Smedira, Maran Thamilarasan, Zoran B Popovic, Milind Y Desai
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Abstract

Background: Neighborhood median household income (NMHI), a key social determinant of health, is being recognized as a major source of inequity in healthcare. Its impact on patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is uncertain.

Objective: We sought to study the association between NMHI and long-term outcomes of HCM patients.

Methods: This was an observation registry of 6368 HCM patients (median age 56 years, 58 % men, 83 % white, 32 % with ≥1 sudden death risk factor) who underwent a clinical evaluation at a tertiary care center between 2002 and 18. NMHI (US$) was calculated from each patient's zip code, using data from the US Census Bureau and Department of Housing & Urban Development. The primary outcome was death, appropriate internal cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) discharge or heart transplant in follow up.

Results: Patients were categorized as obstructive (oHCM, n = 3827 or 60 %, 65 % symptomatic, median NMHI $51,600) and nonobstructive (nHCM, n = 2541 or 40 %, 73 % asymptomatic, median NMHI $53,700) using echocardiography. At a median of 6 years (interquartile range or IQR 2.91, 9.74), there were 998 (16 %) primary events (deaths = 939), with breakdown as follows: 599/3827 (16 %) in oHCM and 399/2541 (16 %) in nHCM, respectively. On multivariable Cox survival analysis, a higher NMHI was independently associated with improved long-term freedom from primary events (oHCM [Hazard ratio or HR 0.84 95 % Confidence Interval or CI 0.80-0.88] and nHCM [HR 0.95 95 % CI 0.91-9.97]), both p < 0.01. On penalized spline analysis, the NMHI at which the hazard for primary events crossed 1 was ~$52,000 for both oHCM and nHCM. In nHCM patients, NMHI greater than $52,000 was associated with improved longer-term freedom from primary events vs. those whose NMHI was lower than $52,000 (196/1398 [14 %] vs. 203/1143 [18 %], log-rank p-value<0.01). Similarly, oHCM patients with NMHI greater than $52,000 had significantly improved longer-term freedom from primary events vs. those whose NMHI was lower than $52,000 (186/2067 [9 %] vs. 413/1760 [23 %] vs., log-rank p-value<0.001).

Conclusions: NMHI, a marker of socioeconomic status, is independently associated with outcomes in patients with HCM. oHCM patients below the NMHI cutoff had significantly worse long-term outcomes vs. the nHCM patients similarly below the NMHI cutoff.

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To the editor: Artificial intelligence applied to ECG predicts mortality after a transcatheter aortic valve replacement. Are ORBITA trials practice-changing? Association of neighborhood median income to outcomes in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Proposed enhanced recommendations for interpretation of electrocardiographic screening of athletes. Waist to hip ratio modifies the cardiovascular risk of lipoprotein (a): Insights from MESA.
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