# Relationship between Baseline Serum Potassium and 1-Year Readmission in Pediatric Patients with Heart Failure: A Retrospective Cohort Study

**Authors:** Yong Han, Yuqin Huang, Danyan Su, Dongli Liu, Cheng Chen, Yusheng Pang

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/children11060725 · 2024-06-14

## TL;DR

High serum potassium levels in children with heart failure are linked to higher readmission rates within one year.

## Contribution

Identifies an optimal serum potassium range to reduce readmissions in pediatric heart failure patients.

## Key findings

- 38.9% of pediatric HF patients were readmitted within 1 year.
- High potassium levels (≥4.7 mmol/L) were independently associated with increased readmission risk.
- A J-shaped relationship was observed, with lowest risk at 4.1 mmol/L.

## Abstract

Pediatric heart failure (HF) is associated with high readmission rates, but the optimal serum potassium range for this population remains unclear. In this single-center retrospective cohort study, 180 pediatric patients hospitalized for HF between January 2016 and January 2022 were stratified into low-potassium (<3.7 mmol/L), middle-potassium (3.7–4.7 mmol/L), and high-potassium (≥4.7 mmol/L) groups based on the distribution of potassium levels in the study population. The primary outcome was readmission for HF within 1 year of discharge. Cox regression and restricted cubic spline models were used to assess the association between potassium levels and 1-year HF readmission rates. Notably, 38.9% of patients underwent 1 or more 1-year readmissions for HF within 1 year. The high-potassium group had a significantly higher readmission frequency than the middle-potassium group. In multivariate Cox regression models, potassium levels of ≥4.7 mmol/L were independently associated with increased 1-year readmission risk. A J-shaped relationship was observed between baseline potassium levels and 1-year readmission risk, with the lowest risk at 4.1 mmol/L. In pediatric patients with HF, a serum potassium level ≥ 4.7 mmol/L was independently associated with increased 1-year readmission risk. Maintaining potassium levels within a narrow range may improve outcomes in this population.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** heart failure (MONDO:0005252)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** HF (MESH:D006333)
- **Chemicals:** Potassium (MESH:D011188)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11201687/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11201687