The relation between repeated 6-minute walk test performance and outcome in patients with chronic heart failure

L Ingle, J G Cleland, A L Clark, L Ingle, J G Cleland, A L Clark

Abstract

Objective: To assess the prognostic implications of the 6-minute walk test (6-MWT) distance measured twice, one year apart, in a large sample of patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) followed for an extended period (>8 years from baseline).

Material and methods: Patients undertook a 6-MWT at baseline and at one year, and were followed up for 8 years from baseline.

Results: Six hundred patients (median [inter-quartile range, IQR]) (age 78 [72-84] years; 75% males; body mass index 27 [25-31] kg·m(-2); left ventricular ejection fraction 34 [26-38] %) were included. At baseline, median 6-MWT distance was 232 (60-386) m. There was no significant change in 6-MWT distance at one year (change -12m; P=0.533). During a median follow-up of 8.0 years in survivors, 396 patients had died (66%). Four variables were independent predictors of all-cause mortality in a multivariable Cox model (adjusted for body mass index, age, QRS duration, left ventricular ejection fraction); increasing NT pro-BNP, decreasing 6-MWT distance at 1 year, decreasing haemoglobin, and increasing urea.

Conclusions: Distance walked during the 6-MWT is an independent predictor of all-cause mortality in patients with CHF. In survivors, the 6-MWT distance is stable at 1 year. The 6-MWT distance at 1 year carries similar prognostic information.

Keywords: 6-minute walk test; Chronic heart failure; Insuffisance cardiaque; Repeat testing; Risk; Risque; Test de marche de 6minutes; Tests répétés.

Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.

Source: PubMed

3
Suscribir