Abstract

Background: Patients are surviving longer after myocardial infarction (MI), but little is known about the occurrence and predictors of subsequent hospitalizations. Methods: We identified all Olmsted Count residents with incident MI from 1987-2008 and evaluated Olmsted County hospitalizations through 2009. ICD-9 codes were used to determine the primary reason for hospitalization. To account for repeated events, Andersen-Gill models were used to examine the predictors of hospitalization post-MI. Patients were censored at death or last follow-up. Results: A total of 2617 patients (mean 67 years, 41% female, 32% with ST-elevation MI) were diagnosed with incident MI from 1987-2007 and survived MI hospitalization. Over a mean follow-up of 7.1 years, 10116 hospitalizations occurred equating to a median of 3 (range 0 to 43) per person. Only 37.5% (n=3793) of hospitalizations were due to cardiovascular causes, and of these, most were due to ischemic heart disease (n= 1865, 49.2%) and heart failure (n= 733, 19.3%). The proportion of non-cardiovascular hospitalizations increased over time and was higher in women than men, but did not differ by ST-segment status. Several factors were associated with the risk of hospitalization after adjusting for year of diagnosis and sex (Figure). Biomarker levels were not predictors of hospitalization risk. Conclusions: Two-thirds of hospitalizations among incident MI survivors in the community are for non-cardiovascular reasons, and this proportion has increased. Comorbidities are important predictors of recurrent hospitalizations. Therapies focused solely on MI management may be insufficient to prevent the majority of future admissions.

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