@article{3220480, title = "QT interval extracted from 30-minute short resting Holter ECG recordings predicts mortality in heart failure", author = "Arsenos, P. and Gatzoulis, K.A. and Laina, A. and Doundoulakis, I. and Soulaidopoulos, S. and Kordalis, A. and Oikonomou, G. and Triantafyllou, K. and Fragakis, N. and Vasilikos, V. and Tsioufis, K.", journal = "Journal of Electrocardiology", year = "2022", volume = "72", pages = "109-114", publisher = "Elsevier B.V.", issn = "0022-0736, 1532-8430", doi = "10.1016/j.jelectrocard.2022.03.013", keywords = "adult; aged; Article; cardiovascular mortality; cardiovascular parameters; controlled study; female; heart failure; heart left ventricle ejection fraction; heart rate; heart rate variability; Holter monitoring; human; independent variable; major clinical study; male; middle aged; prediction; predictor variable; prospective study; QRS interval; QT interval; standard deviation of normal to normal; survival; ambulatory electrocardiography; electrocardiography; long QT syndrome; physiology; procedures; rest, Aged; Electrocardiography; Electrocardiography, Ambulatory; Heart Failure; Heart Rate; Humans; Long QT Syndrome; Male; Middle Aged; Rest", abstract = "Background: Prolonged repolarization duration is a significant total mortality (TM) predictor in post-myocardial infarction patients. Aim: We examined the clinical significance of QT interval that was extracted from a Short Resting Holter ECG (SRH ECG – 30-min duration) as a TM predictor in heart failure (HF) patients. Methods: One hundred forty-five HF patients (male = 84%, mean age = 64 ± 12 years, mean LVEF = 33 ± 10%) underwent an SRH ECG recording for 30 min. These high-resolution ECG signals were analyzed and the QT interval was calculated and corrected according to the Fridericia formula. After 42.1 months, 26 patients died. Results: Univariate analysis for Deceased and Living groups: QTc:455 ± 33 ms vs 441 ± 32 ms (p = 0.04), LVEF:32 ± 10% vs 34 ± 9% (p < 0.5), Mean Heart Rate: 73 ± 11 bpm vs 69 ± 12 bpm (p = 0.2), SDNN/HRV: 45 ± 42 ms vs 41 ± 29 ms (p = 0.4), QRS: 123 ± 26 ms vs 119 ± 29 ms (p = 0.5). Multivariate Cox regression analysis with model adjusted for QTc, Mean Heart Rate, LVEF, QRS, revealed that QTc-Fridericia interval was an independent TM predictor (H.R.:1.017, 95% C.I.: 1.003–1.030, p = 0.01). The cut-off point of 490 ms (90th percentile) in the same model presented HR: 2.9 for TM (95%C.I.: 1.066–7.882, p = 0.03). Kaplan Meier curves depicted a clear difference in survival between the two patients' groups (QTc Group≥490 ms vs QTc Group <490 ms). The curve diverge was important (log-rank, p = 0.02). Conclusion: A fast risk stratification approach with SRH ECG recording is an efficient method for flash evaluation of mortality risk in HF patients. © 2022 Elsevier Inc." }