| Literature DB >> 28571618 |
Gerhard Pölzl1, Johann Altenberger2, Loant Baholli3, Paola Beltrán4, Attila Borbély5, Josep Comin-Colet6, Juan F Delgado7, Francesco Fedele8, Antonella Fontana9, Friedrich Fruhwald10, Gregory Giamouzis11, George Giannakoulas12, Martín J Garcia-González13, Finn Gustafsson14, Kari Kaikkonen15, Matti Kivikko16, Jacek Kubica17, Dirk von Lewinski10, Ida Löfman18, Gabriella Malfatto19, Nicolás Manito6, Martin Martínez-Sellés20, Josep Masip4, Bela Merkely21, Fabrizio Morandi22, Henning Mølgaard23, Fabrizio Oliva24, Emil Pantev25, Zoltán Papp5, Gian Piero Perna26, Roman Pfister27, Vito Piazza28, Ramón Bover29, Diego Rangel-Sousa30, Alejandro Recio-Mayoral31, Alexander Reinecke32, Andreas Rieth33, Toni Sarapohja16, Gunter Schmidt34, Mirko Seidel35, Stefan Störk36, Bojan Vrtovec37, Gerhard Wikström38, Patrik Yerly39, Piero Pollesello40.
Abstract
Patients in the latest stages of heart failure are severely compromised, with poor quality of life and frequent hospitalizations. Heart transplantation and left ventricular assist device implantation are viable options only for a minority, and intermittent or continuous infusions of positive inotropes may be needed as a bridge therapy or as a symptomatic approach. In these settings, levosimendan has potential advantages over conventional inotropes (catecholamines and phosphodiesterase inhibitors), such as sustained effects after initial infusion, synergy with beta-blockers, and no increase in oxygen consumption. Levosimendan has been suggested as a treatment that reduces re-hospitalization and improves quality of life. However, previous clinical studies of intermittent infusions of levosimendan were not powered to show statistical significance on key outcome parameters. A panel of 45 expert clinicians from 12 European countries met in Rome on November 24-25, 2016 to review the literature and envision an appropriately designed clinical trial addressing these needs. In the earlier FIGHT trial (daily subcutaneous injection of liraglutide in heart failure patients with reduced ejection fraction) a composite Global Rank Score was used as primary end-point where death, re-hospitalization, and change in N-terminal-prohormone-brain natriuretic peptide level were considered in a hierarchical order. In the present study, we tested the same end-point post hoc in the PERSIST and LEVOREP trials on oral and repeated i.v. levosimendan, respectively, and demonstrated superiority of levosimendan treatment vs placebo. The use of the same composite end-point in a properly powered study on repetitive levosimendan in advanced heart failure is strongly advocated.Entities:
Keywords: Advanced heart failure; Clinical trial; Composite end-point; Intermittent; Levosimendan; Repetitive
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28571618 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2017.05.081
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cardiol ISSN: 0167-5273 Impact factor: 4.164