Abstract

The Acute Dialysis Quality Initiative (ADQI) XI Workgroup has suggested defining heart failure (HF) in patients with end-stage renal disease by the presence of at least one out of eight predefined echocardiographic criteria. Given the high prevalence of echocardiographic alterations in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients, we hypothesized that application of echocardiographic ADQI criteria will result in overdiagnosis of HF, without providing substantial prognostic information. Among 472 CKD stage G2-G4 patients recruited in the CARE FOR HOMe study, we assessed the presence of left-ventricular (LV) hypertrophy, valvular dysfunction, high left-atrial volume index (LAVI), systolic and diastolic LV dysfunction, enlarged LV diameter, and altered regional LV wall contractility. According to the ADQI proposal, presence of one or more of these alterations defined HF. We followed all patients for the occurrence of cardiac decompensation, defined as hospital admission for decompensated HF. A total of 313 (66%) out of 472 patients fulfilled at least one ADQI echocardiographic criterion for HF. Echocardiographic alterations were more common in advanced (G3b/G4: 80%) than in milder (G2/G3a: 56%) CKD. Within subcategories of echocardiographic criteria, an increased LAVI (50%) and diastolic dysfunction (30%) were the most frequent findings. During follow-up of 4.3 ± 2.0 years, the majority (87%) of all 313 patients who fulfilled ADQI echocardiographic criteria were not hospitalized for cardiac decompensation. Echocardiographic criteria proposed by ADQI as a precondition for the clinical staging of HF are virtually omnipresent among CKD patients. By labelling a majority of CKD patients as having HF, application of ADQI criteria fails to specifically identify patients at high risk for future cardiac events.

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