1 / 49

Heart Failure Associate Professor Rob Doughty Dept of Medicine, The University of Auckland &

Heart Failure Associate Professor Rob Doughty Dept of Medicine, The University of Auckland & Green Lane Cardiovascular Service, Auckland City Hospital. Acute Heart Failure Chronic heart failure Pharmacotherapy “failed” therapies Device-based therapies Newer therapeutics.

Download Presentation

Heart Failure Associate Professor Rob Doughty Dept of Medicine, The University of Auckland &

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Heart Failure Associate Professor Rob Doughty Dept of Medicine, The University of Auckland & Green Lane Cardiovascular Service, Auckland City Hospital

  2. Acute Heart Failure • Chronic heart failure • Pharmacotherapy • “failed” therapies • Device-based therapies • Newer therapeutics

  3. The Rotterdam Study Bleumink GS et al. Euro Heart J 2004;25:1614-19 • Population-based cohort of 7,983 people age 55 • 30% of individuals age 55 years will develop HF in their remaining life

  4. Hospital Admissions for Heart Failure • Incidence and prevalence data are relatively difficult to obtain • Hospitalisation data are often used as surrogates • Rely on discharge coding • Reasonable reflection of the burden of heart failure • Used for planning healthcare delivery

  5. Aging Population 2021 2001 1986 Source: Statistics NZ

  6. Mortality from Cardiovascular Disease Source: NZ Heart Foundation Technical Report No 82 Jan 2004

  7. Incidence and Prevalence of HF • Incidence & prevalence strongly age related • Incidence • 50’s 2 per 1000, 80’s 40 per 1000 • Prevalence • 2-3%, increasing to 8-10% in elderly populations Levy D et al. NEJM 2002;347:1397

  8. Trends in Hospitalisations for HF Stewart S et al. EHJ 2001;22:209-217

  9. Acute Heart Failure • Definition • Incidence and prevalence • Hospitalisations • Management • Patient characteristics • Aetiology • Treatment

  10. Definition of Heart Failure • Symptoms of heart failure (rest or exercise) • Objective evidence of cardiac dysfunction and in cases where diagnosis remains in doubt • Response to treatment directed at HF ESC HF Guidelines EHJ 2005;26:1115-1140

  11. Definition of Heart Failure Acute heart failure defined as rapid onset of symptoms and signs, secondary to abnormal cardiac function • With or without previous cardiac disease • Systolic or diastolic dysfunction, abnormal rhythm, preload and afterload mismatch • Often life-threatening ESC Acute HF Guidelines EHJ 2005;26:384-416

  12. Several Distinct Clinical Conditions • Acute decompensated HF May be de novo or as decompensated HF Symptoms relatively mild and not 2-4 below • Hypertensive AHF • Pulmonary oedema and severe respiratory distress • Cardiogenic shock • High output HF • Right-sided acute HF Low output syndrome with increased JVP, hepatomegaly and hypotension ESC Acute HF Guidelines EHJ 2005;26:384-416

  13. Patient Characteristics Survey of 11,327 HF cases in Europe • Mean age 71 yrs, 47% women • 65% prior diagnosis of HF • 44% prior admission for HF Presentation • 40% acute dyspnoea • 35% exertional dyspnoea / oedema • 19% acute coronary syndrome • 9% atrial fibrillation Cleland JGF et al. EHJ 2003;24:442-463

  14. Patient Characteristics Admission • 50% general medical wards • 11 days average length of stay Death rates: • 6.9% during index admission • 13.5% at 3 months Cleland JGF et al. EHJ 2003;24:442-463

  15. Aetiology of Heart Failure • Heart failure clinical syndrome with underlying cause • Underlying cause often not focused on • Hypertension & coronary disease commonest causes

  16. Aetiology of Heart Failure Fox KF et al. EHJ 2001;22:228-236

  17. Acute HF: Levosimendan • Levosimendan calcium sensitiser and vasodilator • Previous trials showing efficacy SURVIVE • Levosimendan vs. Dobutamine in patients with acute decompensated HF • 1327 patients • Primary end point: • all cause mortality at 180 days Mebazza A et al. JAMA 2007;297:1883

  18. SURVIVE Trial Mebazza A et al. JAMA 2007;297:1883

  19. Proposed Effects of Nesiritide • Hemodynamic • Vasodilation: • Veins • Arteries • Coronary arteries • Neurohormonal •  Aldosterone •  Endothelin-1 •  Noradrenaline • Renal • Diuresis • Natriuresis BNP • Cardiac • Lusitropic • Anti-remodeling • Anti-fibrotic

  20. Nesiritide • Smaller trials demonstrating short term efficacy • FDA approval in 2001 • Acute decompensated HF • Subsequent meta-analyses suggesting potential adverse effects

  21. Nesiritide Any iv Vasodilator Nesiritide GTN Hauptman PJ, et al. JAMA 2005;296:1877 Data from 491 US hospitals, 385,627 admissions for HF

  22. FUSION II Trial 1 Week 12 All Nesiritide 0.8 All Placebo 0.6 Event Free Survival 0.4 P=0.791 HR (95% CI) 1.03 (0.82, 1.30) 0.2 0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 Weeks Out-patient based treatment, nesiritide 1 or 2 weekly LVEF <40%, Class III/IV HF

  23. Chronic Heart Failure

  24. Neurohormonal Status in Heart Failure • SNS • RAAS • Vasopressin • Endothelin-1 • ?Urotensin II DILATATION • Natriuretic peptides • Nitric oxide • Vasodilatory PGs • Adrenomedullin • Urocortin CONSTRICTION

  25. Neurohormonal Antagonists Annual Mortality (%) 10 5 0 + ACEi + b-blocker Diuretics + Digoxin + ACEi Cleland meta-analysis; Lechat meta-analysis

  26. Secular Trends in Survival For Patients with HF Patients with Reduced LVEF Patients with Preserved LVEF Owan TE, et al. N Engl J Med 2006;355:251-9

  27. Mortality After Hospital Admission for HF Wasywich C. CSANZ 2007

  28. CHARM Trial Programme: Summary CHARM Alternative ACEi intolerant pt Lancet 2003;362:772 ARB suitable alternative to ACEi CHARM Added Candesartan + ACEi Lancet 2003;362:767 Some additive benefit of addition of ARB to ACEi but…..beware adverse effects

  29. Long-Term Effects of Treatment CONSENSUS I Trial 10-year FU 1-year FU

  30. Recent “Failed” Phase III HF Trials ClassDrugTrial TNFEtanercept RENEWAL blockade VasopeptidaseOmapatrilat OVERTURE inhibition EndothelinBosentan ENABLE blockade Packer Circ 2002;106:920 Mann Circ 2004;1091594

  31. “Failed” Drugs in Heart Failure Increase mortality (sudden death) with: • Milrinone • Flosequinan • Ibopamine • Moxonidine • Class I antiarrhythmics

  32. Emerging Drug Therapies in HF • Ranolazine (metabolic agent) • Erythropoietin • HMGcoA reductase inhibitors • Adenosine agonists • AGE cross-link breakers • Immune modulation therapy • Rosuvastatin • Ivabradine (If channel inhibitor) • Eplerenone • Levosimendan • NEP/ECE inhibitors • Vasopressin antagonists • Nesiritide • Copper chelation agents

  33. Vasopressin System V1a receptors V2 receptors Arterial underfilling Hyperosmolality • Baroreceptors • Left atrium • Carotid sinus • Aortic arch Hypothalamus • Supraoptic nucleus • Paraventricular nucleus AVP Collecting duct of kidney Vascular smooth muscle Vasoconstriction Water re-absorption OPC-31260SR121463TolvaptanLixivaptanVP-343FR-161282 OPC-21268Relcovaptan ConivaptanJTV-605CL-3 85004 Adapted from Sanghi et al Eur Heart J 2005

  34. EVEREST Outcome Trial Konstam MA, et al. JAMA 2007;297:1319 • Efficacy of Vasopressin Antagonism in Heart failure Outcome Study with Tolvaptan • Tolvaptan (30mg/d) vs. placebo • 4133 patients with LVEF < 40% • Outcomes: • All-cause mortality • CVS death or hospitalisation for worsening HF • Follow up minimum 60 days, median 9 months

  35. EVEREST Outcome Trial Konstam MA, et al. JAMA 2007;297:1319 All-Cause Mortality CVS Death or Hospitalisation for HF

  36. Anaemia and HF

  37. Erythropoietin in HF • 26 patients, EPO vs. placebo, 6 months • End points: Hb and Peak Vo2 Mancini DM, et al. Circulation 2003;107:294 Haemoglobin VO2

  38. Potential Benefits of EPO • Prevention of apoptosis • Endothelial progenitor cell mobilisation • Induction of angiogenesis/ neovascularisation • Limitation of ischaemia/reperfusion injury

  39. Biventricular Pacing • LBBB common in HF patients • “Dysynchrony” between ventricles • Biventricular pacing (cardiac resynchronisation therapy, CRT) • Pace right and left ventricle (via lead in coronary sinus) • Improved cardiac output in severe HF • Improved quality of life • Improved survival

  40. Implantable Defibrillators • Small implantable devices like pacemakers • Able to deliver small electric shock across the heart to terminate ventricular arrhythmias • Improved survival in patients with chronic heart failure

  41. SCD-HeFT: Amiodarone or ICD in CHF • 2521 patients with HF, NYHA II/III, LVEF <35%, ICD vs. amiodarone vs. placebo • Absolute Risk Reduction at 5yrs = 7.2% G Bardy et al. NEJM 2005;352:225-37

  42. Device-Based Therapy in HF Cardiac resynchronisation therapy • Patients with sinus rhythm, wide QRS on ECG (>120msec), LVEF <35%, moderate to severe symptom Implantable defibrillators • Prophylactic ICD for patients with LVEF<30% and mild to moderate symptoms

  43. HF with Preserved LVEF Inclusion End-Points Duration Drug CHARM CHF, age>70 Mortality 1 yr Candesartan EF>40% Hosp PEP-CHF CHF, age>70 Mortality 2 yrs Perindopril EF>40% Hosp I-PRESERVE CHF, age>60 Mortality 2 yrs Irbesartan EF>45% CVS Hosp TOP CAT CHF Mortality 3 yrs Aldo antag EF>45% Hosp

  44. ACEi in HF with Preserved EF CHARM Preserved CVS Death or HF Hospitalisation PEP-CHF Death or HF Hospitalisation Yusuf S, et al. Lancet 2003;362:777-781 Cleland JGF, et al. EHJ 2006;27:2338

  45. Treatment Heart Failure with Preserved LVEF Disease targeted therapy • Hypertension • BP target levels • Prevent / regress LVH • Atrial fibrillation • Control rate, anticoagulation • Coronary artery disease • Prevention / revascularisation • Diabetes / metabolic syndrome • Other • Anaemia, CRF, arrhythmias (esp. AF)

  46. Diabetes and HF Haas SJ et al. Am Heart J 2003;146:848 Diabetes worse

  47. Diabetes and HF • Specific therapies for patients with diabetes and heart failure • Metformin and improved outcomes in HF (PHANTOM Study) • AGE cross-link breakers in diastolic HF (Alteon) • Copper chelation

  48. Summary • Acute heart failure • Pathophysiology • Aetiology • treament • Chronic heart failure • Established therapies • “Failed” therapies • Device-based therapies • Specific patient subgroups • Disease specific • Patient specific

More Related