Article ID: CJ-24-0991
Background: Although tricuspid regurgitation (TR) is no longer considered a negligible disease, its detailed status in real-world heart failure (HF) patients remains unknown.
Methods and Results: From the KUNIUMI registry, we evaluated data for 1,646 consecutive HF patients. The primary endpoint was all-cause mortality over a median follow-up period of 3.0 years (interquartile range 1.4–3.0 years). Of the 1,646 HF patients, 369 (22.4%) had moderate or greater TR; the mean (±SD) age of these patients was 82.0±8.5 years. Atrial functional TR was the most common etiology of TR in HF patients with moderate or greater TR (70.7%), and was more common in HF patients with severe than moderate TR (75.5% vs. 65.3%; P=0.032). The mortality rate was high in HF patients with severe and moderate TR (27.1% and 17.0%, respectively). During follow-up, 33.1% of HF patients with moderate TR progressed to severe TR, and showed unfavorable all-cause mortality compared with those with unchanged TR. Atrial functional TR was a more common etiology in HF patients with moderate TR and worsened TR than in those with unchanged TR (84.6% vs. 59.5%; P=0.004). Right atrial enlargement was independently correlated with worsened TR.
Conclusions: Moderate or greater TR was prevalent in 22.4% of the real-world super-aged HF population. Even HF patients with moderate TR had poor outcomes, with right atrial remodeling a key factor for worsened TR.