Background: Quality of life (QoL) is impaired in diastolic heart failure. Little is known about QoL in diastolic dysfunction (DD) without heart failure.
Methods: In the DIAST-CHF observational study, outpatients with risk factors for or a history of heart failure were included. In a cross-sectional analysis, we classified patients with preserved systolic function as having normal diastolic function (N, n = 264) or DD without (DD-, n = 957) or with (DD+, n = 321) elevated filling pressures according to echocardiography. Quality of life was evaluated by the Short Form 36 (SF-36) questionnaire.
Results: Short Form 36 physical function (SF-36-PF) was worse in DD+ (mean ± SD 67.2 ± 25.6) than in DD- (76.2 ± 22.7, P < .05) than in N (mean ± SD 81.1 ± 23.5, P < .01). Other physical dimensions and the physical component score were also lower in DD, whereas the mental component score did not differ. The SF-36-PF correlated weakly with echocardiographic indicators of diastolic function. In multivariate linear regression controlling for age, sex, body mass index, depressiveness as assessed by Patient Health Questionnaire 9, N-terminal probrain-type natriuretic peptide, and midregional proadrenomedullin (MR-proADM), individual echocardiographic parameters or grade of DD was not independently associated with SF-36-PF, whereas the presence of DD+ was. Both N-terminal probrain-type natriuretic peptide and MR-proADM were independently associated with SF-36-PF, with MR-proADM showing the stronger association.
Conclusions: Physical dimensions of QoL are reduced in DD. Impaired SF-36-PF is only weakly associated with DD per se but rather seems to be contingent on the presence of elevated filling pressures. Biomarkers are more strongly and independently associated with SF-36-PF and may be more adequate surrogate markers of QoL in DD than echocardiographic measurements.
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