Background Takotsubo syndrome ( TTS ) is an acute reversible heart condition initially believed to represent a benign pathology attributable to its self‐limiting clinical course; however, little is known about its prognosis based on different triggers. This study compared short‐ and long‐term outcomes between TTS based on different triggers, focusing on various physical triggering events. Methods and Results We analyzed patients with a definitive TTS diagnosis recruited for the Spanish National Registry on TTS (RETAKO [Registry on Takotsubo Syndrome]). Short‐ and long‐term outcomes were compared between different groups according to triggering factors. A total of 939 patients were included. An emotional trigger was detected in 340 patients (36.2%), a physical trigger in 293 patients (31.2%), and none could be identified in 306 patients (32.6%). The main physical triggers observed were infections (30.7%), followed by surgical procedures (22.5%), physical activities (18.4%), episodes of severe hypoxia (18.4%), and neurological events (9.9%). TTS triggered by physical factors showed higher mortality in the short and long term, and within this group, patients whose physical trigger was hypoxia were those who had a worse prognosis, in addition to being triggered by physical factors, including age >70 years, diabetes mellitus, left ventricular eyection fraction <30% and shock on admission, and increased long‐term mortality risk. Conclusions TTS triggered by physical factors could present a worse prognosis in terms of mortality. Under the TTS label, there could be as yet undiscovered very different clinical profiles, whose differentiation could lead to individual better management, and therefore the perception of TTS as having a benign prognosis should be generally ruled out.
Background Tako-tsubo Syndrome (TS) seems to be associated with a catecholamine-mediated mechanism. However, the impact of beta-blockers (BB) in-hospital and after discharge still remain uncertain. Objectives: The purpose of the study was to examine whether BB use after discharge in patients with TS, was associated with lower long-term mortality and recurrence. Methods Using a national multicentre large-scale inpatient database (RETAKO Registry), we analysed patients with a definitive TS diagnosis. Results A total of 970 patients were analysed (568 with BB therapy and 402 no-BB therapy). After discharge and over a median of follow-up of 1.1 years, treatment with BB have no shown prognostic effectiveness in terms of mortality and TS recurrence in unadjusted and adjusted Cox analysis (HR 0.86; 95% CI: 0.59 to 1.27; and 0.95; 95% CI: 0.57–1.13, respectively). Conclusions This data suggests that use of beta-blockers after hospital discharge has not shown long-term prognostic benefit in patients with Tako-tsubo Syndrome. Prognostic impact of BB in TS. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding source: Private company. Main funding source(s): Retako webpage was funded by a non-conditioned Astrazeneca scholarship.
Introduction Medical therapy in TakoTsubo Syndrome (TTS) remains mainly empirical, given the lack of randomized studies evaluating different pharmacological strategies. The prognostic benefit of angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitors and angiotensin II receptor blocker (ACEI/ARB) is not well established. The clinical data published so far are often based on small sample registries and offer opposite results, both in terms of survival and TTS recurrence. Expert recommendations seem favorable to the prescription of ACEI and ARB. Nevertheless, clinical investigation is encouraged for validating the observed results. Purpose The aim of our study was to evaluate the long-term prognostic impact of renin-angiotesin blockers (ACEI or ARB) in terms of mortality and TTS recurrence. Methods The data analyzed in this study were obtained from the nationwide registry “RETAKO”. It included TTS post-discharge survivors, between January 1, 2003, and July 31, 2018. A total of 1062 patients were included for analysis. Cox regression analysis and inverse probability weighting (IPW) propensity score analysis were performed to asses the prognostic benefit of ACEI/ARB. Primary endpoint was a composite outcome of all-cause mortality and TTS recurrence. Results A total of 1062 TTS patients were included. ACEI or ARB were used in 639 patients (60.2%). During a mean follow-up of 2.7±3.5 years, there were 101 deaths (3.9 per 100 patients/year) and 34 recurrences of TTS (1.3 per 100 patients/year). We found no significant difference in follow-up mortality or TTS recurrence in unadjusted and adjusted Cox regression analysis (Hazard Ratio [HR] 0.69, 95% Confidence Interval [CI] 0.47–1.02) between patients treated and untreated with ACEI/ARB. After performing propensity score matching, differences in long term prognosis (all-cause mortality or recurrence) remained no statistically significant (HR 0.73, 95% CI 0.45–1.18). Conclusions In this observational study, we found that ACEI and ARB therapy was not significantly associated with improved long term survival free of recurrence in post-discharged TTS patients. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding sources: None. Incidence of primary endpoint
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