Abstract

Heart failure has become one of the fastest growing cardiovascular diagnoses, with estimates as high as 500 000 new cases per year.1,2 This growth is in part a result of the reductions in death from acute coronary syndromes, increased use of implantable cardioverter defibrillators, and improved survival with most cardiovascular interventions, which have led to this continued increase in the number of patients who develop progressive heart failure (HF). The estimated number of people in the United States with the diagnosis of HF may exceed 7 million, based on the estimated average prevalence of 2.6%,3,4 and a census of >300 million population (Figure 1).5,6 HF is clearly age related,1,–,4 with prevalence as low as 0.5% in those 65 years of age.2 This is an important demographic, because it is estimated that the number of people >65 years of age will double in the next 20 to 30 years.4,–,7 HF is not a homogeneous condition. Based primarily on data from recent hospital registries8,9 and other studies,10 nearly half of all patients have HF with preserved systolic function, and the other half have varying degrees of severity of HF with reduced systolic function. Although the prevalence of HF is higher in males at <70 years of age, overall HF is equally common in men and women. Unfortunately, the average survival of patients with either preserved or reduced systolic function is only 40% at 5 years after diagnosis,10,11 and may be as high as 80% when it reaches a refractory stage.12 One study of 3500 patients in Minnesota suggested that there is …

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