Background: Patients with severe congestive heart failure (CHF) become refractory to conventional medical therapy, leading to recurrent rehospitalizations. We examined the impact of intermittent outpatient ultrafiltration (UF), using either peritoneal dialysis or hemofiltration, on long-term clinical outcomes in patients with refractory CHF.
Methods and results: We analyzed clinical and hemodynamic data in 19 consecutive patients with refractory CHF who received intermittent outpatient UF for at least 1 year between July 1998 and November 2002. The mean left ventricular ejection fraction of all 19 patients was 30.2 +/- 19.0%. All patients (100.0%) were New York Heart Association (NYHA) class IV. Only 5 patients (26.3%) received peritoneal dialysis; the remaining 14 (73.7%) received hemofiltration. There were 6 patients with a normal left ventricular ejection fraction (45%). After UF was started, the number of patients that were considered inotrope-dependent was reduced from 86.4% to 36.8% (P < .005). Compared with the year before UF was initiated, the number of CHF hospitalizations during follow-up was reduced from 2.6 to 0.3 (P < .005), and the NYHA class was improved from 4 to 3.1 (P < .005). Among all patients, 2 deaths were related to complications of UF, and cumulative 1-year survival was 63.2%.
Conclusion: Our study suggests that UF is a safe, feasible therapy, but it needs further evaluation in carefully designed, prospective, randomized clinical trials. UF has the potential for offering another important therapeutic option for patients with severe and refractory CHF.