Temporal trends of epidemiological data on acute heart failure (AHF) are limited. We sought to assess changes in epidemiology, clinical presentation and management of AHF in Greece using data from two international registries conducted three years apart. The Acute Heart Failure Global Registry of Standard Treatment (ALARM-HF) and the European Society of Cardiology-Heart Failure (ESC-HF) pilot survey were conducted during 2006-2007 and 2009-2010, respectively. A total of 432 AHF patients were recruited by Greek sites in the two registries (255 in ALARM-HF and 177 in ESC-HF pilot survey). About 60% of patients in both registries presented with acutely decompensated chronic HF and 40% with de novo AHF. The use of life-prolonging, guideline-recommended medications increased over time (pre-admission use of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors/ angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) from 47% to 60%, beta-blockers from 31% to 65%, aldosterone antagonists from 18% to 45%). Those therapies also increased during hospitalisation in both registries. Patients were treated by cardiologists in >90% of cases during hospitalisation; the main intravenous therapies in both registries were diuretics (94% and 97%), followed by vasodilators (47% and 22%) and inotropes (31% and 20%). The length of hospitalisation remained similar (6-7 days in both registries), while in-hospital mortality dropped from 8.5% in the ALARM-HF to 4.5% in the ESC-HF pilot survey. A temporal increase in the use of life-prolonging therapies along with an improvement of in-hospital mortality was observed. Clinical profiles, in-hospital management and outcome of AHF patients in Greece were similar to other European countries, despite regional differences in healthcare systems.
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