Objective
The objective was to
determine the relationship between short-term mortality and
intravenous morphine use in ED patients who received a diagnosis of
acute heart failure (AHF).
Methods
Consecutive patients
with AHF presenting to 34 Spanish EDs from 2011 to 2014 were eligible
for inclusion. The subjects were divided into those with (M) or
without IV morphine treatment (WOM) groups during ED stay. The
primary outcome was 30-day all-cause mortality, and secondary
outcomes were mortality at different intermediate time points,
in-hospital mortality, and length of hospital stay. We generated a
propensity score to match the M and WOM groups that were 1:1
according to 46 different epidemiological, baseline, clinical, and
therapeutic factors. We investigated independent risk factors for
30-day mortality in patients receiving morphine.
Results
We included 6,516
patients (mean age, 81 [SD, 10] years; 56% women): 416 (6.4%) in the
M and 6,100 (93.6%) in the WOM group. Overall, 635 (9.7%; M, 26.7%;
WOM, 8.6%) died by day 30. After propensity score matching, 275
paired patients constituted each group. Patients receiving morphine
had a higher 30-day mortality (55 [20.0%] vs 35 [12.7%] deaths;
hazard ratio, 1.66; 95% CI, 1.09-2.54; P = .017). In patients
receiving morphine, death was directly related to glycemia (P = .013)
and inversely related to the baseline Barthel index and systolic BP
(P = .021) at ED arrival (P = .021). Mortality was increased at every
intermediate time point, although the greatest risk was at the
shortest time (at 3 days: 22 [8.0%] vs 7 [2.5%] deaths; OR, 3.33; 95%
CI, 1.40-7.93; P = .014). In-hospital mortality did not increase (39
[14.2%] vs 26 [9.1%] deaths; OR, 1.65; 95% CI, 0.97-2.82; P = .083)
and LOS did not differ between groups (median [interquartile range]
in M, 8 [7]; WOM, 8 [6]; P = .79).
Conclusions
This propensity
score-matched analysis suggests that the use of IV morphine in AHF
could be associated with increased 30-day mortality.
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