Internal and emergency medicine
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Multicenter Study
Digoxin initiation after an acute heart failure episode and its association with post-discharge outcomes: an international multicenter analysis.
Digoxin is commonly used to treat acute heart failure (AHF), especially in patients with concurrent atrial fibrillation (AF). Nonetheless, there is little consensus about in which patients digoxin should be given, the proper time for digoxin initiation, and whether digoxin initiation is associated with improved outcomes. We investigated factors related to digoxin initiation after an episode of AHF and whether patients receiving digoxin presented better short-term outcomes. ⋯ Parameters inversely associated with receiving digoxin at discharge included some chronic treatments, diabetes mellitus (DM), and chronic kidney disease (CKD). Digoxin initiation was not association with 90-day adverse events, adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) = 0.939 (0.769-1.146), but there was an interaction for CKD, aHR = 1.390 (0.831-2.325) vs. 0.854 (0.682-1.183), p = 0.039, and for cohort pertinence, with higher risk in the Swiss cohort; aHR = 1.405 (0.827-2.386) vs. 0.862 (0.689-1.077), p = 0.046. Digoxin initiation after an AHF episode was more frequent in the Spanish cohort and was associated with certain patient characteristics (AF, female sex, reduced LVEF, no DM, no CKD), but had no effect on 90-day outcomes.
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Multicenter Study
The Fenice project to evaluate and improve the quality of healthcare in high-dependency care units: results after the first year.
High-Dependency care Units (HDUs) have been introduced worldwide as intermediate wards between Intensive Care Units (ICUs) and general wards. Performing a comparative assessment of the quality of care in HDU is challenging because there are no uniform standards and heterogeneity among centers is wide. The Fenice network promoted a prospective cohort study to assess the quality of care provided by HDUs in Italy. ⋯ The expertise of HDUs in managing complex and fragile patients is supported by both the available equipment and the characteristics of admitted patients. The limited proportion of patients transferred to ICUs supports the hypothesis of preventing of ICU admissions. The heterogeneity of HDU admissions requires further research to define meaningful patients' outcomes to be used by quality-of-care assessment programs.
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Multicenter Study Comparative Study
Faster steroid-free remission with tocilizumab compared to methotrexate in giant cell arteritis: a real-life experience in two reference centres.
Glucocorticoids (GCs) are still the mainstay of treatment of giant cell arteritis (GCA). Although GCs are highly effective in GCA, the high burden of toxicity of GCs as well as the disease relapse during GC tapering is well documented. To compare the efficacy and rapidity of TCZ and MTX as steroid-sparing agents in a real-life cohort of GCA patients. ⋯ Similarly, at month 12, 64.5% (20/31) and 11.1% (9/81) of patients were in sustained GC-free remission in TCZ and MTX group, respectively (p value <0.001). At month 24 of follow-up, at least one relapse of the disease occurred in 7/31 (22.6%) in TCZ-treated and 28/81 (34.6%) in MTX-treated patients, respectively (p value = 0.22). TCZ allowed a faster discontinuation of steroid therapy than MTX in GCA patients, without increasing the risk of relapse.
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Multicenter Study
Impact of early myocardial injury on patients with severe pneumonia.
Pneumonia often causes myocardial damage. This study sought to understand how early myocardial injury affects severe pneumonia patients' prognoses. This multi-center prospective cohort study from March 2020 to October 2023 comprised severe pneumonia patients. ⋯ Adjusted Kaplan-Meier survival analysis showed significantly decreased short-term and long-term survival rates with myocardial injury (log-rank test P < 0.05). The mediation study showed that cardiac complications and AKI mediated myocardial injury and death by 19.30% and 17.18%, respectively. Early myocardial injury in severe pneumonia patients raises the likelihood of cardiac problems, AKI, and refractory shock, reducing short- and long-term survival.
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Multicenter Study Observational Study
Development and validation of a nomogram for assessing comorbidity and frailty in triage: a multicentre observational study.
Assessing patient frailty in the Emergency Department (ED) is crucial; however, triage frailty and comorbidity assessment scores developed in recent years are unsatisfactory. The underlying causes of this phenomenon could reside in the nature of the tools used, which were not designed specifically for the emergency context and, thus, are difficult to adapt to the emergency environment. The objective of this study was to create and internally validate a nomogram for identifying different levels of patient frailty during triage. ⋯ The internal validation of the nomogram reported an area under the receiver operating characteristic of 0.91 (95% CI 0.884-0.937). A nomogram was created for assessing comorbidity and frailty during triage and was demonstrated to be capable of determining comorbidity and frailty in the ED setting. Integrating a tool capable of identifying frail patients at the first triage assessment could improve patient stratification.