| Description: |
Background Studies assessing whether heart failure (HF) is associated with an excess risk of cancer and cancer–related mortality yielded conflicting results. Here, we assessed the incidence and mortality of cancer according to the presence of HF in a community–based cohort. Methods By reviewing the health care records of the Puglia region in Italy, we first selected the individuals ≥50–year–old, with no history of cancer within 3 years before the baseline evaluation and ≥5 years of follow–up, during the period from January 1st, 2005 to December 31st, 2013. Next, we matched 1:1 104,020 subjects with HF at baseline and 104,020 controls based on age, sex, Drug–Derived Complexity Index, and follow–up duration. Cancer incidence and mortality were analyzed by Kaplan–Meier method and Cox regression models. Fine and Grey’s regression model was also used to compare cancer–specific mortality while taking into account the competing risk of non–cancer death. Results Overall, the mean age of the study population was 76±10 years and the mean follow–up was 5.7 years. The incidence rate of cancer in HF patients and controls was 21.36 (95%CI, 20.98–21.74) and 12.42 (95%CI, 12.14–12.72) per 1000 person/years, respectively, corresponding to a 76% higher risk of incident cancer in HF patients (HR, 1.76; 95%CI, 1.71–1.81). HF patients also died from cancer more frequently than controls (HR 4.11; 95%CI, 3.86–4.38; Figure 1). This excess mortality was highest when age was |