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. 2020 Jun 30;10(1):10644.
doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-66788-y.

Hospitalization for acute heart failure: the in-hospital care pathway predicts one-year readmission

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Hospitalization for acute heart failure: the in-hospital care pathway predicts one-year readmission

Claire Duflos et al. Sci Rep. .

Abstract

In patients with heart failure, some organizational and modifiable factors could be prognostic factors. We aimed to assess the association between the in-hospital care pathways during hospitalization for acute heart failure and the risk of readmission. This retrospective study included all elderly patients who were hospitalized for acute heart failure at the Universitary Hospital Lariboisière (Paris) during 2013. We collected the wards attended, length of stay, admission and discharge types, diagnostic procedures, and heart failure discharge treatment. The clinical factors were the specific medical conditions, left ventricular ejection fraction, type of heart failure syndrome, sex, smoking status, and age. Consistent groups of in-hospital care pathways were built using an ascending hierarchical clustering method based on a primary components analysis. The association between the groups and the risk of readmission at 1 month and 1 year (for heart failure or for any cause) were measured via a count data model that was adjusted for clinical factors. This study included 223 patients. Associations between the in-hospital care pathway and the 1 year-readmission status were studied in 207 patients. Five consistent groups were defined: 3 described expected in-hospital care pathways in intensive care units, cardiology and gerontology wards, 1 described deceased patients, and 1 described chaotic pathways. The chaotic pathway strongly increased the risk (p = 0.0054) of 1 year readmission for acute heart failure. The chaotic in-hospital care pathway, occurring in specialized wards, was associated with the risk of readmission. This could promote specific quality improvement actions in these wards. Follow-up research projects should aim to describe the processes causing the generation of chaotic pathways and their consequences.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no competing interests.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Flow chart of inclusion of Heart Failure cases in analyses (modified from Thesis).
Figure 2
Figure 2
Projection of clusters based on the two first axes of the Multiple Component Analysis (re-used from Thesis). The horizontal axis is the first axis. It opposes pathways with passages in cardiology wards on the left and pathways with passages in geriatrics on the right. The vertical axis is the second axis. It opposes simple pathways on the bottom and complex pathways on the top.

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