Background: Chronic heart failure (CHF) is a debilitating condition associated with poor outcome, including increased anxiety. However, anxiety and its determinants have not yet been studied systematically in CHF. We examined whether type-D personality and depressive symptoms would predict clinically significant anxiety at 1-year follow-up.
Methods: Consecutive patients with systolic CHF (n=149; 79% men; mean age 66+/-8.6) completed the type-D Scale (DS14), the Beck Depression Inventory, and the Anxiety Sensitivity Index at baseline. A clinical interview (Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale) was used to assess clinically significant anxiety at 1-year follow-up.
Results: At 12 months follow-up, 26% (9/35) of type-D patients had clinically significant anxiety versus only 6% (7/114) of the non type-Ds (p=0.001). In univariable analyses, type-D personality (OR=5.3; p=0.002) and anxiety sensitivity (OR=4.5; p=0.009), but not depressive symptoms (p=0.27) predicted clinically significant anxiety. Type-D remained an independent predictor of anxiety at 1 year (OR=5.7; p=0.01), controlling for depressive symptoms, anxiety sensitivity, socio-demographic and clinical variables. Adding type-D in a hierarchical logistic regression model, comprising standard and psychological risk factors, enhanced the level of prediction of clinically significant anxiety substantially (-2LL=75.16 chi(2)=26.46; p=0.009).
Conclusions: Type-D personality, but not depressive symptoms predicted 1-year clinically significant anxiety. The type-D scale could be used to identify CHF patients at high risk of anxiety, as these patients may be at an increased risk of adverse prognosis and impaired quality of life.