Abstract

Abstract Background Depression has emerged as a critical risk factor for development and progression of various cardiovascular diseases; however, the association between depression and Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM) outcomes is less clear. We aimed to determine the impact of comorbid depression on patients hospitalized with HCM. Methods The National Inpatient Sample (2020) was assessed to identify patients hospitalized with HCM using relevant ICD-10 codes. Propensity score matching of 1:1 was performed and the cohort was divided into two - those with comorbid depression (HCM-D+) and those without (HCM-D-). Baseline characteristics and comorbidities were compared between the two cohorts. Impact of comorbid depression on hospitalized HCM patients was evaluated using a multivariate regression analysis adjusting for confounders. Results We identified a cohort of 15530 in-hospital HCM patients with a median age of 67 years (66.9% females, 33.1% males, 74.6% whites, 19.1% blacks, 4.3% hispanics, 1.7% Asians). Amongst 15530, 85.5% admissions were non-elective. The HCM-D+ cohort had significantly higher rates of comorbidities such as hypertension (76.4% vs 71.4%), hyperlipidemia (62.5% vs 52.4%), obesity (27.9% vs 24.9%), smoking (28.1% vs 25.7%), dementia (8.2% vs 4.4%) and cancer (7.5% vs 5.8%) (p<0.001). When in-hospital outcomes were compared, HCM-D+ cohort paradoxically appeared to have 44% lower risk of all-cause mortality (OR-0.56; 95%CI: 0.37- 0.84), 22% lower risk of composite end points (all-cause mortality, heart failure, atrial fibrillation, cardiac arrest including ventricular fibrillation, acute ischemic stroke) (OR-0.78; 95%CI:0.66-0.91), 21% lower risk of atrial fibrillation alone (OR-0.79; 95%CI:0.67-0.92) (p<0.001). Conclusion Despite having higher rates of comorbidities, comorbid depression in HCM patients appeared to improve in-hospital outcomes. Further studies are needed to uncover the paradoxical protection provided by underlying depression.

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