Background: This study investigated whether QRS duration (QRS D) is a prognostic indicator in patients with heart failure (New York Heart Association [NYHA] classes II-IV).
Methods and results: This subgroup analysis included 248 patients with heart failure recruited in the German centers of the Valsartan Heart Failure Trial (Val-HeFT). Mean age was 60 years, mean NYHA class was 2.3, and mean left ventricular ejection fraction (EF) was 27.9%. Electrocardiograms were recorded and analyzed at the beginning of the study, at 2 weeks, 4 months, 1 year, and 2 years. The mean observation period for mortality was 25 months. Patients > or = 65 years and patients with an EF <20% had a significantly longer QRS D (P = .02; P = .0005). NYHA class, etiology of heart failure, therapy with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, amiodarone or beta-blockers, implanted defibrillator, and atrial fibrillation had no significant influence on QRS D. Total mortality was 9%: 14 patients died suddenly, 7 from heart failure, 2 from noncardiac causes. Kaplan-Meier plots show significantly different survival rates for patients with QRS D <120 ms, QRS D 120-159 ms, or QRS D > or = 160 ms (P = .0085). Multivariate analysis showed that QRS D was the only independent risk factor for all-cause mortality (P = .008). NYHA class, EF, atrial fibrillation, age, and gender failed to qualify as independent prognostic factors.
Conclusion: QRS duration in the surface electrocardiogram is an easily obtainable parameter with a significant prognostic impact in patients with congestive heart failure and a reduced EF. In this German subgroup of Val-HeFT patients, it was an independent predictor of all-cause mortality.