ACTA MEDICA
ACTA MEDICA
Acta Medica (Hradec Králové) is an English language multidisciplinary medical journal. Acta Medica publishes reviews, original articles, brief communications, case reports, announcements, and notices. The journal was founded in 1958 under the title “A Collection of Scientific Works of the Charles University’s Faculty of Medicine in Hradec Králové”. The journal is indexed in Chemical Abstracts, CNKI, DOAJ, EBSCO, Hinari, Index Medicus, MEDLINE, Scopus, and Ulrichsweb.

ACTA MEDICA, Vol 68 No 4 (2025), 142–150

Article

Clinical Trajectories and Outcomes of Acute Heart Failure in Internal Medicine: A Real-World Single-Centre Study

Edgardo J. KaplinskyORCID, Silvia Masmitjà Comajuan, Josefa Torres Martínez, Ana Serrado Iglesias, Daniel Cuartero Guerrero, Francesc Planas Ayma, Lourdes Zurita, Gustavo Tolchinsky Wiesen, Esther Moreno Ariño, Àngels Fumàs Comas, Cristina Carod Pérez

DOI: https://doi.org/10.14712/18059694.2026.5
published online: 24. 03. 2026

abstract

Purpose: To analyze the clinical characteristics and outcomes of patients with acute heart failure (AHF) admitted to an internal medicine department (IMD), with a focus on their trajectories, risk factors, and rehospitalisation/mortality rate. Methods: This retrospective cohort study included 410 hospitalisations (280 patients; 28% readmissions) for AHF during 2023. Diagnosis was validated using the European Society of Cardiology age-specific NT-proBNP thresholds and echocardiographic criteria. Baseline clinical and laboratory data were analyzed, prognostic markers were identified, and a risk algorithm was developed. Results: Mean patient age was 82 years (54% women). Most cases involved nonischemic etiology (80%) and HF with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF, 69%). Frequent comorbidities included hypertension (85%), diabetes (45%), atrial fibrillation (44%), and multiple noncardiac conditions. In-hospital mortality was 19.6%; 30-day readmission was 9.9%. Three clinical trajectories (index/first hospitalisation) were identified: single admission (n: 169), rehospitalisation (with/without death) (n: 73), and in-hospital death (n: 38). Prognostic markers included advanced age, elevated NT-proBNP, renal dysfunction, anemia, and non-cardiac cause of HF decompensation. Conclusions: This elderly IMD-HF cohort, mainly female and multimorbid, showed high HFpEF prevalence and adverse outcomes. NT-proBNP, renal function, haemoglobin, and non-cardiac causes of HF decompensation were key prognostic indicators.

keywords: heart failure; hospitalization; rehospitalization; mortality; NT-proBNP

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Clinical Trajectories and Outcomes of Acute Heart Failure in Internal Medicine: A Real-World Single-Centre Study is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

210 x 297 mm
periodicity: 4 x per year
print price: 150 czk
ISSN: 1211-4286
E-ISSN: 1805-9694

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