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GIUSEPPINA NOVO

Beta-Blockers and Long-Term Mortality in Takotsubo Syndrome: Results of the Multicenter GEIST Registry

  • Authors: Raposeiras-Roubin, S.; Santoro, F.; Arcari, L.; Vazirani, R.; Novo, G.; Uribarri, A.; Enrica, M.; Lopez-Pais, J.; Guerra, F.; Alfonso, F.; Pätz, T.; Fernandez-Cordon, C.; Montisci, R.; Corbi-Pascual, M.; Marchetti, M.F.; Almendro, M.; Cacciotti, L.; Vedia, O.; El-Battrawy, I.; Blanco-Ponce, E.; Brunetti, N.D.; Akin, I.; Martinez-Sellés, M.; Thiele, H.; Stiermaier, T.; Eitel, I.; Nuñez-Gil, I.J.
  • Publication year: 2025
  • Type: Articolo in rivista
  • OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/692511

Abstract

Background: Beta-blockers are considered a reasonable therapy for patients with Takotsubo syndrome (TTS), commonly used despite the absence of consistent evidence about its prognosis impact. Objectives: This study aimed to assess the impact of beta-blocker therapy on long-term mortality and TTS recurrence. Methods: The authors analyzed 2,853 patients discharged with a confirmed TTS diagnosis, enrolled in the international multicenter GEIST (The GErman Italian Spanish Takotsubo Registry). They performed a propensity score matching analysis to draw up 2 groups of 697 patients paired according to whether or not they received medical therapy with beta-blockers at hospital discharge. The prognostic value of beta-blockers at discharge to predict mortality and TTS recurrence during follow-up was analyzed using Cox regression. Results: During a mean follow-up of 2.6 years, 485 patients (17.0%) died and 97 (3.4%) have had TTS recurrence. Patients treated with beta-blockers at discharge (n = 2,125) (74.5%) had a lower mortality rate (6.0 vs 8.1 per 100 patients/year). After propensity score matching, the authors found that mortality during follow-up was lower in the beta-blocker group (HR: 0.71; 95% CI: 0.55-0.90). Differences in mortality were especially at the expense of mortality in the first year. No differences were found by subgroups. Moreover, beta-blocker therapy was not associated with lower TTS recurrence during the follow-up (HR: 0.74; 95% CI: 0.61-1.89). No association between the use of beta-blockers at discharge and left ventricle ejection fraction recovery has also been observed. Conclusions: Beta-blocker therapy in patients with TTS is associated with lower follow-up mortality, but not with lower TTS recurrence. (The GErman Italian Spanish Takotsubo Registry [GEIST]; NCT04361994).