Background: Long-term prognosis of acute pulmonary edema (APE) remains ill defined.
Methods and results: We evaluated demographic, echocardiographic, and angiographic data of 806 consecutive patients with APE with (CAD) and without coronary artery disease (non-CAD) admitted from 2000 to 2010. Differences between hospital and long-term mortality and its predictors were also assessed. CAD patients (n=638) were older and had higher incidence of diabetes and peripheral vascular disease than non-CAD (n=168), and lower ejection fraction. Hospital mortality was similar in both groups (26.5% vs 31.5%; P=0.169) but APE recurrence was higher in CAD patients (17.3% vs 6.5%; P<0.001). Age, admission systolic blood pressure, recurrence of APE, and need for inotropics or endotracheal intubation were the main independent predictors of hospital mortality. In contrast, overall mortality (70.0% vs 57.1%; P=0.002) and readmission for nonfatal heart failure after a 45-month follow-up (10-140; 17.3% vs 7.6%; P=0.009) were higher in CAD than in non-CAD patients. Age, peripheral vascular disease, and peak creatine kinase MB during index hospitalization, but not ejection fraction, were the main independent predictors of overall mortality, whereas coronary revascularization or valvular surgery were protective. These interventions were mostly performed during hospitalization index (294 of 307; 96%) and not intervened patients showed a higher risk profile.
Conclusions: Long-term mortality in APE is high and higher in CAD than in non-CAD patients. Considering the different in-hospital and long-term mortality predictors herein described, which do not necessarily involve systolic function, it is conceivable that a more aggressive interventional program might improve survival in high-risk patients.
Keywords: acute pulmonary edema; coronary artery disease; long‐term mortality.
© 2016 The Authors. Published on behalf of the American Heart Association, Inc., by Wiley Blackwell.