Abstract

Heart failure (HF) disproportionately affects black compared to white Americans, and overall mortality from HF is greater among blacks. Paradoxically, mortality rates after a hospitalization for HF are lower in black than in white patients. These racial differences might reflect hospital, physician, and patient factors and could have implications for comparative hospital profiles. We identified published studies reporting the posthospitalization mortality for black and white patients with a discharge diagnosis of HF and conducted random-effects meta-analyses with the outcome of all-cause mortality. We included 29 cohorts of hospitalized black and white patients with HF. The unadjusted mean mortality rate after HF hospitalization for black and white patients, respectively, was 6% and 9% for in-hospital, 6% and 10% for 30-day, 10% and 15% for 60- to 180-day, 28% and 34% for 1-year, and 41% and 47% for >1-year follow-up, respectively. The unadjusted combined odds ratios for mortality in black versus white patients ranged from 0.48 for in-hospital (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.45 to 0.51) to 0.77 after >1 year follow-up (95% CI 0.75 to 0.79). In meta-analyses using adjusted data, the combined odds ratio was 0.68 for short-term mortality (95% CI 0.63 to 0.74), and the combined hazard ratio was 0.84 for long-term mortality (95% CI 0.77 to 0.91). In conclusion, mortality after hospitalization for HF was 32% lower during short-term follow-up and 16% lower during long-term follow-up for black than for white patients. The mortality differences imply unmeasured differences by race in clinical severity of illness at hospital admission and might lead to biased hospital mortality profiles.

Highlights

  • After these changes were made, the unadjusted combined odds ratios (OR) for mortality for black compared with white patients was 0.48 for 6 cohorts reporting inhospital mortality, 0.62 for 8 cohorts reporting 30-day mortality, 0.71 for 2 cohorts reporting 60-180 day mortality, 0.68 for 4 cohorts reporting 1 year mortality, and 0.77 for 4 cohorts reporting deaths beyond 1 year

  • The lower mortality rates in black patients after heart failure (HF) hospitalization is surprising because of previous data from national and ambulatory cohorts indicating that HF death rates are higher or similar among blacks compared with whites.[29]

  • Black patients had higher mortality in one cohort of almost 30,000 HF patients after 10 years of follow–up,[31] and no difference in mortality by race in a national sample of outpatient veterans with HF.[30]. Comparing these results of higher or similar mortality in black patients in ambulatory cohorts with our result of lower mortality in black patients after hospitalization for HF highlights a paradox in HF mortality

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Summary

Introduction

After a hospitalization for heart failure (HF), numerous reports indicate that mortality is lower in black compared with white patients;[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25] and a few studies report that mortality is similar.[26, 27] This lower or similar reported mortality in hospitalized black patients with HF is not accompanied by reports of substantially better quality of care in black compared with white patients..[27, 28] national and ambulatory cohorts of patients with HF demonstrate higher or similar mortality in black compared with white patients.[29, 30] The comparison of HF mortality by race among either population-based or ambulatory-based cohorts on one hand, with hospitalbased cohorts on the other hand, highlights a paradox in HF mortality by race. The objective of this study was to examine studies reporting mortality by race after a hospitalization for HF and combine the results using meta-analyses

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