A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Clinical Profile and Influences on Outcomes in Patients Hospitalized for Acute Pericarditis
Authors: Ville Kytö, Jussi Sipilä, Päivi Rautava
Publisher: American Heart Association, Inc
Publishing place: 7272 Greenville Avenue, Dallas, TX 75231
Publication year: 2014
Journal: Circulation
Volume: 130
Issue: 18
First page : 1601
Last page: 1606
Number of pages: 6
ISSN: 0009-7322
eISSN: 1524-4539
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.114.010376
Web address : http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/130/18/1601.full.pdf+html
Background—The clinical profile with regard to sex and the influences on outcomes in patients who have been hospitalized
for acute pericarditis is largely uncharacterized.
Methods and Results—We studied all patients aged ≥16 years admitted to the hospital because of acute pericarditis
(postpericardiotomy and myocardial infarction associated pericarditis were excluded). Data were collected from a
Finnish national registry that included data on all cardiovascular admissions (670 409) during 9.5 years in 29 hospitals
nationwide. During the study period, there were 1361 admissions for acute pericarditis. Pericarditis patients were more
likely to be male (64.9% of patients) than female (35.1%), with an age-adjusted likelihood ratio of 1.85 (95% confidence
interval [CI], 1.65–2.06; P<0.0001) for male sex. The standardized incidence rate of hospitalizations for acute pericarditis
was 3.32 per 100 000 person-years. Men 16 to 65 years of age were at higher risk for pericarditis (relative risk, 2.02;
95% CI, 1.81–2.26; P<0.0001) than women in the general admitted population, with the highest risk difference among
young adults. Acute pericarditis caused 0.20% (95% CI, 0.19%–0.22%) of all cardiovascular admissions. The proportion
of pericarditis-caused admissions declined by an estimated 51% per 10-year increase in age. The in-hospital mortality
rate for acute pericarditis was 1.1% (95% CI, 0.6%–1.8%). Mortality increased with age (hazard ratio, 3.26; 95% CI,
1.78–5.95 per 10-year increase in age; P=0.0001) and severe coinfection (pneumonia or septicemia; hazard ratio, 13.46;
95% CI, 2.26–80.01; P<0.005) but was not associated with sex in multivariate analysis.
Conclusions—Patients hospitalized for acute pericarditis are more commonly male. Increasing age and severe coinfection are
associated with greater in-hospital mortality in hospitalized acute pericarditis patients.