Journal Article10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.122.062918
Patient Characteristics, Outcomes, and Effects of Dapagliflozin According to the Duration of Heart Failure: A Prespecified Analysis of the DELIVER Trial
Toru Kondo,Karola S. Jering,C. Jan Willem Borleffs,W. De Boer,Brian Claggett,Akshay S. Desai,Dan Dobreanu,Silvio E. Inzucchi,Adrian F. Hernandez,Stefan Janssens,Pardeep S. Jhund,Mikhail Kosiborod,Carolyn S.P. Lam,Anna Maria Langkilde,Felipe Martinez,Magnus Petersson,Pham Nguyen Vinh,Muthiah Vaduganathan,Scott D. Solomon,John J.V. McMurray +19 more
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TL;DR: In this article , the authors compared the efficacy and safety of dapagliflozin, according to the time from diagnosis of heart failure in a prespecified analysis of the DELIVER trial.
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Abstract: Background: How patient characteristics and outcomes vary according to the duration of heart failure (HF) is unknown in individuals with mildly reduced or preserved ejection fraction. We compared these, and the efficacy and safety of dapagliflozin, according to the time from diagnosis of HF in a prespecified analysis of the DELIVER trial (Dapagliflozin Evaluation to Improve the Lives of Patients With Preserved Ejection Fraction Heart Failure). Methods: HF duration was categorized as ≤6 months, >6 to 12 months, >1 to 2 years, >2 to 5 years, or >5 years. The primary outcome was the composite of worsening HF or cardiovascular death. The effect of treatment was examined by HF duration category. Results: The number of patients in each category was as follows: 1160 (≤6 months), 842 (>6 to 12 months), 995 (>1 to 2 years), 1569 (>2 to 5 years), and 1692 (>5 years). Patients with longer-duration HF were older and had more comorbidities with worse symptoms. The rate of the primary outcome (per 100 person-years) increased with HF duration: ≤6 months, 7.3 (95% CI, 6.3 to 8.4); >6 to 12 months, 7.1 (6.0 to 8.5); >1 to 2 years, 8.4 (7.2 to 9.7); >2 to 5 years, 8.9 (7.9 to 9.9); and >5 years, 10.6 (9.5 to 11.7). Similar trends were seen for other outcomes. The benefit of dapagliflozin was consistent across HF duration category: the hazard ratio for the primary outcome in the ≤6-month group was 0.67 (95% CI, 0.50 to 0.91); >6 to 12 months, 0.78 (0.55 to 1.12); >1 to 2 years, 0.81 (0.60 to 1.09); >2 to 5 years, 0.97 (0.77 to 1.22); and >5 years, 0.78 (0.64 to 0.96; Pinteraction=0.41). The absolute benefit was greatest in longest-duration HF; the number needed to treat for HF >5 years was 24 versus 32 for ≤6 months. Conclusions: Patients with longer-duration HF were older, had more comorbidities and symptoms, and had higher rates of worsening HF and death. The benefits of dapagliflozin were consistent across HF duration. Even patients with long-standing HF and generally mild symptoms are not stable, and it is not too late for such patients to benefit from a sodium–glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitor. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT03619213.
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Phenotypic heterogeneity in human genetic diseases: ultrasensitivity-mediated threshold effects as a unifying molecular mechanism
Y. H. Sun,Yueh-Lin Wu,Ben-Yang Liao +2 more
TL;DR: By understanding the network mechanism for ultrasensitivity and identifying the critical factor, the weak spot is manipulated to gently nudge the system from an ultrasensitive state to a stable non-disease state and provides a new insight into the prevention and treatment of genetic diseases.
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Duration of Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction and Outcomes with Sacubitril/Valsartan: Insights from the PARAGON-HF Trial.
John W. Ostrominski,Brian Claggett,Milton Packer,Marc A. Pfeffer,Carolyn S.P. Lam,Michael R. Zile,Akshay S. Desai,Pardeep S. Jhund,Martin Lefkowitz,John J.V. McMurray,Scott D. Solomon,Muthiah Vaduganathan +11 more
TL;DR: The PARAGON-HF trial as discussed by the authors evaluated clinical outcomes and responses to sacubitril/valsartan by duration of heart failure with left ventricular ejection fraction ≥ 45% at initial diagnosis.
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References
Dapagliflozin in Patients with Heart Failure and Reduced Ejection Fraction
John J.V. McMurray,Scott D. Solomon,Silvio E. Inzucchi,Lars Køber,Mikhail Kosiborod,Felipe Martinez,Piotr Ponikowski,Marc S. Sabatine,Marc S. Sabatine,Inder S. Anand,Jan Bělohlávek,Michael Böhm,Chern-En Chiang,Chern-En Chiang,Vijay K. Chopra,Rudolf A. de Boer,Akshay S. Desai,Mirta Diez,Jarosław Drożdż,Andrej Dukát,Junbo Ge,Jonathan G. Howlett,Jonathan G. Howlett,Tzvetana Katova,Masafumi Kitakaze,Charlotta Ljungman,Béla Merkely,Jose C. Nicolau,Eileen O'Meara,Mark C. Petrie,Pham Nguyen Vinh,Morten Schou,Tereshchenko Sn,Subodh Verma,Claes Held,David L. DeMets,Kieran F. Docherty,Pardeep S. Jhund,Olof Bengtsson,Mikaela Sjöstrand,AM Langkilde +40 more
TL;DR: Among patients with heart failure and a reduced ejection fraction, the risk of worsening heart failure or death from cardiovascular causes was lower among those who received dapagliflozin than amongThose who received placebo, regardless of the presence or absence of diabetes.
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Cardiovascular and Renal Outcomes with Empagliflozin in Heart Failure
Milton Packer,S. D. Anker,J. Butler,G. Filippatos,S. J. Pocock,P. Carson,James L. Januzzi,S. Verma,H. Tsutsui,M. Brueckmann,W. Jamal,K. Kimura,J. Schnee,C. Zeller,D. Cotton,Edimar Alcides Bocchi,M. Böhm,Dong-Ju Choi,V. Chopra,E. Chuquiure,N. Giannetti,S. Janssens,J. Zhang,J. R. Gonzalez Juanatey,Sanjay Kaul,H. P. Brunner-La Rocca,Béla Merkely,Stephen J. Nicholls,Sergio V. Perrone,I. Pina,P. Ponikowski,N. Sattar,Michele Senni,M. F. Seronde,J. Spinar,Iain B. Squire,S. Taddei,Christoph Wanner,F. Zannad +38 more
TL;DR: Those in the empagliflozin group had a lower risk of cardiovascular death or hospitalization for heart failure than those in the placebo group, regardless of the presence or absence of diabetes.
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Sotagliflozin in Patients with Diabetes and Recent Worsening Heart Failure
Deepak L. Bhatt,Michael Szarek,P. Gabriel Steg,Christopher P. Cannon,Lawrence A. Leiter,Darren K. McGuire,Julia B. Lewis,Matthew C. Riddle,Adriaan A. Voors,Marco Metra,Lars H. Lund,Michel Komajda,Jeffrey M. Testani,Christopher S. Wilcox,Piotr Ponikowski,Renato D. Lopes,Subodh Verma,Pablo Lapuerta,Bertram Pitt +18 more
TL;DR: In patients with diabetes and recent worsening heart failure, sotagliflozin therapy, initiated before or shortly after discharge, resulted in a significantly lower total number of deaths from cardiovascular causes and hospitalizations and urgent visits for heart failure than placebo.
How to diagnose heart failure with preserved ejection fraction: the HFA-PEFF diagnostic algorithm: a consensus recommendation from the Heart Failure Association (HFA) of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC)
Burkert Pieske,Carsten Tschöpe,Rudolf A. de Boer,Alan G. Fraser,Stefan D. Anker,Erwan Donal,Frank Edelmann,Michael Fu,Marco Guazzi,Carolyn S.P. Lam,Patrizio Lancellotti,Vojtech Melenovsky,Daniel A. Morris,Eike Nagel,Elisabeth Pieske-Kraigher,Piotr Ponikowski,Scott D. Solomon,Ramachandran S. Vasan,Frans H. Rutten,Adriaan A. Voors,Frank Ruschitzka,Walter Paulus,Petar M. Seferovic,Gerasimos Filippatos,Gerasimos Filippatos +24 more
TL;DR: A new stepwise diagnostic process, the 'HFA-PEFF diagnostic algorithm', is recommended, which requires comprehensive echocardiography and requires comprehensive natriuretic peptide levels and is typically performed by a cardiologist.
A Simple, Evidence-Based Approach to Help Guide Diagnosis of Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction
TL;DR: The H2FPEF score, which relies on simple clinical characteristics and echocardiography, enables discrimination of HFpEF from noncardiac causes of Dyspnea and can assist in determination of the need for further diagnostic testing in the evaluation of patients with unexplained exertional dyspnea.
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