Abstract Background The importance of cardiorenal syndromes (CRS) in patients with heart failure has been shown in many studies. However, there is little data on the impact of a combination of heart failure and renal disease in patients with acute myocardial infarctions. Aim of the present study was to investigate, how often a combination of heart failure (HF) and kidney disease (KD) could be detected in patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarctions and to estimate its impact on outcome. Methods All patients from a German heart center, admitted with STEMI between 2006 and 2022 were analysed. CRS was defined as a combination of heart failure (HF: left ventricular ejection fraction (LV-EF<40%), HF) and kidney disease (KD: GFR at admission <60 ml/min). Patients were assigned in a 2x2 model: HF-/KD-, HF-/KD+, HF+/KD-, HF+/KD+. Outcome analysis was adjusted by confounders in a multivariate Cox-regression-model. Acute kidney injury (AKI) was calculated by AKIN-criteria (KDIGO) Results Of a total of 8276 STEMI-patients included in the study 5696(69%) had a preserved LV-EF and no KD (HF-/KD-), 1354 (16%) a preserved LV-EF and KD (HF-/KD+), 743 (9%) a reduced LV-EF and no KD (HF+/KD-) and 483 (6%) both a reduced LV-EF and KD (HF+/KD+, CRS-Group). In the CRS-group patients were on average older (74.2±12 yrs. vs. 60.8±13 yrs., p<0.01), more likely to be female (36.9% vs. 23.1% in the control group, p<0.01) and more likely to be diabetics (31.0% vs. 16.8% in the control group, p<0.01). CRS was associated with higher rates of cardiogenic shock (41.5% vs. 8.7% in the control group) and higher rates of subsequent AKI with a 18x higher risk to develop AKIN-3 with or without the need for renal replacement therapy (RRT), (table, upper part). In patients with CRS in 11% of patients a temporal RRT was necessary vs. 0.5% in controls. Furthermore, in CRS-patients in-hospital and 1 year-mortality-rates were markedly higher (table, lower part). When adjusting outcomes for confounders (age, gender, CS, diabetes, anterior STEMI, 3 VD) the detrimental effect of CRS on outcome remained: AKIN-3/RRT: OR 16.5, 95% CI 7.5-30.0, p<0.01, In-hospital-mortality: OR 14.2, 95% CI 7.8-21, p<0.01, 1-year-mortality: HR 10.5, 95% CI 7.5-14.1, p<0.01. Conclusions In this analysis of registry data, cardiorenal disease could be detected in 6% of STEMI-patients, with higher rates in women and in diabetics. Patients with cardiorenal disease showed a more than 18-fold higher risk of suffering severe renal failure during the index event and a 24-fold higher risk of in-hospital death. Patients with either heart failure or renal disease were situated between the CRS and control group with regard to outcome. These results underline the additive effects of cardiac and renal disease.Table:Event rates by HF and KD group
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