RESEARCH

 

Is mortality from heart failure increasing in Australia? An analysis of official data on mortality for 1997–2003

 

Evolution de la mortalité par insuffisance cardiaque en Australie. Une analyse des données officielles de mortalité de 1997 à 2003

 

¿Está aumentando la mortalidad por insuficiencia cardiaca en Australia? Análisis de los datos oficiales sobre la mortalidad en 1997–2003

 

 

Farid Najafi1; Annette J Dobson; Konrad Jamrozik

School of Population Health, University of Queensland, Herston Road, Herston, Queensland 4006, Australia

 

 


ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess whether trends in mortality from heart failure (HF) in Australia are due to a change in awareness of the condition or real changes in its epidemiology.
METHODS: We carried out a retrospective analysis of official data on national mortality data between 1997 and 2003. A death was attributed to HF if the death certificate mentioned HF as either the underlying cause of death (UCD) or among the contributory factors.
FINDINGS: From a total of 907 242 deaths, heart failure was coded as the UCD for 29 341 (3.2%) and was mentioned anywhere on the death certificate in 135 268 (14.9%). Between 1997 and 2003, there were decreases in the absolute numbers of deaths and in the age-specific and age-standardized mortality rates for HF either as UCD or mentioned anywhere for both sexes. HF was mentioned for 24.6% and 17.8% of deaths attributed to ischaemic heart disease and circulatory disease, respectively, and these proportions remained unchanged over the period of study. In addition, HF as UCD accounted for 8.3% of deaths attributed to circulatory disease and this did not change materially from 1997 to 2003.
CONCLUSION: The decline in mortality from HF measured as either number of deaths or rate probably reflects a real change in the epidemiology of HF. Population-based studies are required to determine accurately the contributions of changes in incidence, survival and demographic factors to the evolving epidemiology of HF.


RÉSUMÉ

OBJECTIF: Déterminer si les tendances de la mortalité par insuffisance cardiaque en Australie résultent d'une amélioration du diagnostic et de la prise en charge de cette affection ou d'une véritable évolution épidémiologique.
MÉTHODES: Une analyse rétrospective a été effectuée sur les données nationales officielles de mortalité pour la période 1997- 2003, un décès étant attribué à une insuffisance cardiaque si le certificat de décès mentionnait celle-ci comme cause primaire (initiale) de décès ou comme un des facteurs contributifs.
RÉSULTATS: Sur 907 242 décès, l'insuffisance cardiaque a été indiquée comme cause primaire dans 29 341 cas (3,2 %) et mentionnée par ailleurs sur le certificat de décès dans 135 268 cas (14,9 %). Entre 1997 et 2003, on a constaté concernant l'insuffisance cardiaque une diminution en valeur absolue de la mortalité par âge et des taux de mortalité standardisés selon l’âge pour les deux sexes, que cette pathologie soit indiquée comme cause primaire ou autre du décès. L'insuffisance cardiaque a été mentionnée respectivement dans 24,6 % et 17,8 % des décès imputés à une cardiopathie ischémique et à une affection circulatoire, les proportions n'ayant pas varié au cours de la période étudiée. En outre, l'insuffisance cardiaque comme cause primaire de décès a représenté 8,3 % des décès attribués à une affection circulatoire et cette proportion n'a pas sensiblement évolué entre 1997 et 2003.
CONCLUSION: La diminution de la mortalité par insuffisance cardiaque mesurée au moyen du nombre de décès ou du taux de mortalité traduit probablement une vraie évolution de l'épidémiologie de cette affection. Des études en population s’imposent pour déterminer exactement les contributions des variations de l'incidence, du taux de survie et des facteurs démographiques dans cette évolution épidémiologique.


RESUMEN

OBJETIVO: Determinar si las tendencias de la mortalidad por insuficiencia cardiaca (IC) en Australia se deben a diferencias de la sensibilización sobre esa enfermedad o a cambios reales de la epidemiología de la dolencia.
MÉTODOS: Llevamos a cabo un análisis retrospectivo de los datos oficiales sobre la mortalidad a nivel nacional entre 1997 y 2003. Se consideró que una defunción era atribuible a IC cuando el certificado de defunción mencionaba ese factor como causa de la muerte o como uno de los factores contribuyentes.
RESULTADOS: De un total de 907 242 defunciones, la insuficiencia cardiaca aparecía codificada como causa de defunción en 29 341 casos (3,2%), y se mencionaba en algún lugar en otros 135 268 casos (14,9%). Entre 1997 y 2003 se registraron disminuciones del número absoluto de defunciones y de las tasas de mortalidad por edad y normalizada por edad para la IC tanto cuando ésta era la causa de defunción como cuando simplemente se mencionaba, y ello en los dos sexos. La IC se mencionaba en el 24,6% y el 17,8% de las defunciones atribuidas a cardiopatía isquémica y a enfermedades del aparato circulatorio, respectivamente, y esos porcentajes se mantuvieron prácticamente estables entre 1997 y 2003.
CONCLUSIONES: La disminución de la mortalidad por IC medida ya sea como número de defunciones o como tasa refleja probablemente un cambio real de la epidemiología de esa dolencia. Es preciso llevar a cabo estudios poblacionales para determinar con precisión la contribución de las variaciones de la incidencia, la supervivencia y los factores demográficos a los cambios de la epidemiología de la IC.



 

 

Introduction

Heart failure (HF) is a disabling chronic disease and a major cause of morbidi ity and mortality among older adults.1 Despite its being a significant burden on health-care systems, especially with recent improvements in survival of patients with HF,2–4 the epidemiology of HF is incompi pletely understood. There are numbers of reports referring to an "epidemic" of HF in developed countries.5–8 However, recent declines in incidence, case fatality and mortality from major antecedents of HF, ischaemic heart disease (IHD) and hypertensive heart disease, suggest that the incidence and mortality of HF might also be changing.3,9–11 Untangling this conundrum requires careful investigation of the relevant epidemiological indices of HF.

In countries with complete vital registration, mortality data can provide valuable information on the epidemiology of HF. While many studies have used data on the single underlying cause of death (UCD) given in official statistics to estimate the mortality from particular diseases,12–15 this strategy can underesti timate mortality associated with some conditions such as HF that are regarded as a "mode of death" rather than an undi derlying "cause of death".16 For example, in Australia in 2002, HF was the official cause of only 2% (2729) of all deaths,17 which appears to be inconsistent with first-year case fatality for HF of 24–28% and an estimated incidence of 30 000 cases per year.3,17

There are additional problems related to use of mortality statistics for conditions whose incidence rises sharply with increasing age. The presence of several chronic conditions in many elderly individuals makes it difficult to identify the exact single UCD. Thus, even where medical certification of cause of death is universal, three factors complicate the use of official mortality statistics to study trends in HF. These are: lack of precision in the diagnosis, certification rules about not ascribing fatalities to a "mode of death", and the presence of multiple co-morbidities.

The study of trends in mortality is potentially complicated by the change from the 9th to the 10th revision of the International classification of diseases (ICD) in the late 1990s, and perhaps also by the adoption of new diagnostic criteria for acute myocardial infarction, which could influence clinical perceptions as to which individuals are at special risk of developing HF.

Complete death registration and certification of all deaths by a medical practitioner facilitate the study of morti tality as one of the main epidemiological features of HF in Australia. Furthermore, recording and coding, within official mortality data, of multiple conditions contributing to death provides an important opportunity to examine not only trends in HF as the UCD, but also in the proportion of all deaths to which HF is believed to have contributed and in other conditions that might "compete" with HF for identification as the UCD. This paper presents a detailed examination of HF as the single cause of death and as a contributor to all deaths in Australia in 1997–2003, when all deaths were coded using ICD-10, to determine whether recent changes in antecedent factors in Australia are reflected in changes in mortality from HF.

 

Methods

Data sources

We obtained computerized records for calendar years 1997–2003 from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW), which collates information on all deaths occurring in Australia. Mortality data in Australia are coded using ICD-10 rules, meaning that ill-defined conditions such as HF are less likely to be accepted as the UCD even if they had been certified as the UCD. We selected all death certificates on which HF was mentioned as the underlying cause or another contributory factor in the death. Data on the Australian population for each year of the study, disaggregated by sex and age, were obtained from the Australia Bureau of Statistics.18

Measurement of HF-related mortality and other associated causes

Australia has used ICD-10 to classify mortality data since 1997. In the present study a death was defined as involving HF if at least one of the causes of death was coded to any of the following ten rubrics: hypertensive heart disease with congestive heart failure (I11.0), hypertensive heart and renal disease with congestive heart failure (I13.0), hypertensive heart and renal disease with heart failure and renal failure (I13.2), ischaemic cardiomyopathy (I25.5), chronic constrictive pericarditis (I31.1), dilated cardiomyopathy (I42.0), alcoholic cardiomyopathy (I42.6), congesti tive heart failure (I50.0), left ventricular heart failure (I50.1), or heart failure, unspecified (I50.9). In addition, to find other conditions associated with HF either as the UCD or as a contributory factor, we identified all mortality records mentioning IHD and circulatory disease as defined by the relevant chapter of ICD-10.

Statistical analysis

The data were analysed using Stata version 8.19 We calculated age- and sex-specific mortality rates for HF for each year by dividing the number of deaths attributed to HF by the relevant population during that year. Mortality rates were standardized using the "European" population,20 treating people aged less than 60 years and 85 years and older as single groups, and employing 5-year age groups to age 85 years. We calculated the mortality rate for HF as the UCD or where HF was mentioned anywhere on the death certificate separately for each year. We estimated trends for both mortality rates and crude total numbers of deaths associated with HF and calculated changes relative to levels in the first year of study.

In order to investigate the extent to which changes in certification or coding practice may have contributed to changes in mortality from HF, we examined trends in other diagnoses associated with HF in two ways. First, we examined the proportion of deaths ascribed to IHD and other circulatory disease in which there was mention of HF. Second, among deaths assigned to HF as UCD, we examined the proportion with mentions of IHD or other circulatory disease. We also examined the trend in the proportion of all deaths from circulatory disease and of all deaths that had mention of HF on the death certificate.

 

Results

In 1997, the total numbers of deaths attributed to HF as UCD or mentioned anywhere on the death certificate were 4667 and 20 614, respectively (Table 1). From 1997 to 2003 the annual numbers of deaths with HF as UCD or mentioned anywhere on the death certificate fell to 3661 and 18 491, decreases of 21.6% and 10.3%, respectively. In each year the number of deaths in women exceeded those in men; over the 7 years, women accounted for 53.9% of deaths for which HF was mentioned anywhere on the death certificate.

Mortality rates

The overall age-standardized mortality rates for HF as UCD or mentioned anywhere were 17.1 and 78.8 per 100 000 person-years, respectively. Mortality rates for HF rose sharply with age (Table 2), but decreased in all age groups and both sexes over the study period, such that age-standardized rates for HF as UCD fell by 38% and 39% in men and women, respectively (Table 1). The decreases were inversely related to age and were least in men and women aged 85 and older (1.3% and 5.7%, respectively).

The age-standardized mortality rate was higher in men than in women. This was true for HF either as the UCD or when it was mentioned anywhere on the certificate, but the excess in males decreased with increasing age such that, among people aged 85 years and older, mortality from HF as UCD was higher in women than in men (Table 2).

Deaths from HF as a proportion of all deaths and deaths due to circulatory disease

HF as UCD accounted for 3.2% of all deaths and 8.3% of deaths due to circulatory disease. Both of these proportions fell slightly during 1997–2003 (Fig. 1). Deaths with any mention of HF made up 14.9% of all deaths, with a small decrease over the period. Among deaths ascribed to circulatory disease, 38.1% had any mention of HF and this proportion did not change over time.

 

 

Relationship between deaths from HF, IHD and circulatory disease

In 1997, 24.8% and 18.3% of all deaths attributed to IHD and circulatory disease mentioned HF as a contributory factor (Fig. 2). These proportions remained stable over the period of study, and were 24.1% and 17.3%, respectively, in 2003. IHD was mentioned on only 2.8% of certificates nominating HF as the UCD. The corresponding proportion for other circulatory disease was 36.3%. Neither of these proportions changed markedly over the period of study.

 

 

Discussion

This study shows a large decline in the mortality rate for HF in Australia since 1997. Several factors suggest that this decline is real and not an artefact arising from changes in writing or coding death certificates. These include the magnitude of the change (38% in 7 years), the unchanging contribution of HF to total cardiovascular mortality, the unchanging proportions of deaths from IHD and circulatory disease with mention of HF, and the very small decreases in HF relative to total mortality.

Rule 3 of ICD-10 specifies that HF should not be recorded as the UCD. Thus, at least some of the deaths ascribed by the certifying doctors to HF will be officially allocated to other conditions such as IHD by the specialist nosologist coding death certificates. However, our data showing no changes in the proportions of deaths from IHD and circulatory disease with mention of HF as a contributory cause suggest that the extent of reassignment of deaths initially ascribed to HF has not changed over the study period. Thus, change in coding practice is very unlikely to have made a major contribution to the decline in mortality from HF that we observed. The unchanged relationship of HF to total mortality from circulatory disease adds further support to this conclusion.

The decrease in mortality from HF in Australia appears to be at odds with recent reports from several comparable countries of an "epidemic" of HF.5–8 However, imprecise use of epidemiological terms is contributing to the confusion about the speed and direction of changes in HF. For example, there is a need to distinguish between "incidence", meaning new cases of HF in a specific period, and "case-load", meaning the count of prevalent cases. The case-load partly reflects the size of the population at risk, which is increasing as the populi lation ages. Therefore the case-load can increase while incidence is stable or even falling. HF may have become relatively more prominent in cardiologists' work because of increased diagnostic activity due to changes in techniques of investigation, or the advent of more effective therapies that extend survival of patients with HF, or because other conditions are becoming less common. Claims that we are in the midst of an "epidemic of heart failure"5 therefore need to be examined critically.

Apart from changes in the preparation and classification of death certificates (discussed above and seen to be unlikely as a cause of the observed decrease), several other factors affect deaths from HF. As mortality from HF is strongly related to age, the increase in the Australian population aged 75 years and older from 5.1% in 1997 to 6.0% in 2003 might have been expected to precipitate an increase in absolute numbers of deaths from HF, but in fact these decreased over the study period. At the same time, the continuing decline in incidence of IHD21 and better care for this condition might have resulted in a decrease in incident cases of HF.22,23 Thus, a decline in the incidence and even the population-wide prevalence of HF is one possible explanation for the observed decline in mortality from HF.

Another possible explanation for observed trends is better care for HF patients.24 Despite continuing underutilization of effective treatment in patients suffering from HF (such as angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, beta-blockers, warfarin and angiotensin-II antagonists),25 earlier diagnosis of HF (as a result of increased use of diagnostic procedures) and increasing use of proven treatments26,27 should have lengthened survival of affected patients. This would increase the period in which competing causes of death could exact their toll. However, without detailed information on the magnitude of each of these effects, it is difficult to quantify the contribution of such factors to the observed decline in mortality from HF in Australia.

The results of this study are consisti tent with previous reports on mortality from HF in Australia that indicate a downward trend from 1981, although these studies were based on analysis of UCD alone.17,28 While studies in Canada and the USA did not show consistent results,13,15 mortality from HF has been falling in England, Scotland and Spain.12,29,30 These trends are based on age-standardized mortality rates and therefore will not be distorted by changes in the age structure of the relevant populations.

Except for the studies in Scotland and England that identified HF mentioned anywhere on the death certificates, all previous reports have been based on HF as UCD. Consequently, in addition to underestimating the real contribution of HF to mortality, variation in selection and recording of HF as the UCD in different countries and periods might produce some systematic errors.31 Furthermore, all of those studies were conducted before 1997 and employed ICD-9. The increasing use of echocardiography for diagnosis of HF since 1997 potentially affords greater diagnostic precision, but may have increased the case-load of diagnosed cases, while possibly also decreasing their average severity. On the other hand, many international studies in the 1990s reported considerable underutilization of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, beta-blockers, and warfarin, which would have contributed to an avoidably high case fatality in HF.32–34

Study limitations

Official mortality statistics are open to artefacts related to changes in diagnosti tic practice and technology concerning particular conditions, customs for the completion of death certificates, and use of new systems and rules for selecting and recording the single UCD. In addition, diagnoses of HF might vary systematically between different populi lations, doctors and sets of diagnostic criteria, which may preclude generalization of our estimated rates to other countries.35,36 However, these potential difficulties probably do not affect the trends we observed during the period studied. As Australia has complete death registration with certification by medical practitioners or coroners, official data on Australian mortality are regarded as being of high quality.37 Our data allow us to rule out a shift away from HF to other cardiovascular conditions in the recording and coding of deaths as the explanation for the decrease in mortality from HF that we have documented. They also relate to a period in which a single system of classification was used to identify and code the UCD.

 

Conclusion

We have demonstrated a major decline in mortality from HF in Australia over recent years. Rather than being an artefact related to changes in certification of death or coding the death certificates, this decline is likely to reflect a real change in the epidemiology of HF. A prospective population-based cohort study would help to determine whether this trend reflects primarily a decline in the incidence of HF, reflecting a decrease in the incidence of IHD, or improved care of patients with IHD, or better management of established HF and reduced case-fatality in this condition.

 

Acknowledgements

We are grateful to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare for providing us with an anonymous copy of the national mortality records.

Funding: The Government of Iran has provided a scholarship to support Dr Najafi's studies in Australia.

Competing interests: none declared.

 

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(Submitted: 28 February 2006 - Final revised version received: 30 March 2006 - Accepted: 10 April 2006)

 

 

1 Correspondence to Farid Najafi (email: s4048347@student.uq.edu.au).

World Health Organization Genebra - Genebra - Switzerland
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