| Literature DB >> 30555280 |
Fabrizio Oliva1, Josep Comin-Colet2, Francesco Fedele3, Friedrich Fruhwald4, Finn Gustafsson5, Matti Kivikko6,7, Attila Borbély8, Gerhard Pölzl9, Carsten Tschöpe10.
Abstract
Inotropes may be an appropriate treatment for patients with advanced heart failure (AdHF) who remain highly symptomatic despite optimized standard therapies. Objectives for inotrope use in these situations include relief of symptoms and improvement of quality of life, and reduction in unplanned hospitalizations and the costs associated with such episodes. All of these goals must be attained without compromising survival. Encouraging findings with intermittent cycles of intravenous levosimendan have emerged from a range of exploratory studies and from three larger controlled trials (LevoRep, LION-HEART, and LAICA) which offered some evidence of clinical advantage. In these settings, however, obtaining statistically robust data may prove elusive due to the difficulties of endpoint assessment in a complex medical condition with varying presentation and trajectory. Adoption of a composite clinical endpoint evaluated in a hierarchical manner may offer a workable solution to this problem. Such an instrument can explore the proposition that repetitive administration of levosimendan early in the period after discharge from an acute episode of worsening heart failure may be associated with greater subsequent clinical stability vis-à-vis standard therapy. The use of this methodology to develop a 'stability score' for each patient means that all participants in such a trial contribute to the overall outcome analysis through one or more of the hierarchical endpoints; this has helpful practical implications for the number of patients needed and the length of follow-up required to generate endpoint data. The LeoDOR study (NCT03437226), outlined in this review, has been designed to explore this new approach to outcome assessment in AdHF.Entities:
Keywords: Intermittent treatment; Outcome; Quality of life; Rehospitalization; Repetitive inotrope
Year: 2018 PMID: 30555280 PMCID: PMC6288643 DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/suy040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Heart J Suppl ISSN: 1520-765X Impact factor: 1.803
Criteria for a diagnosis of advanced heart failure as advised in the 2018 Position Paper of the Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology
| All the following must be present despite optimal guideline-directed treatment: |
Severe and persistent symptoms of heart failure [NYHA Grade III (advanced) or IV] |
Severe cardiac dysfunction (LVEF ≤30%), isolated RV failure (e.g. ARVC) or non-operable severe valve abnormalities or congenital abnormalities or persistently high (or increasing) BNP or NT-proBNP values and data of severe diastolic dysfunction or LV structural dysfunction according to the ESC definition of HFpEF and HFmrEF. |
Episodes of pulmonary or systemic congestion requiring high-dose intravenous diuretics (or diuretic combinations) or episodes of low output requiring inotropes or vasoactive drugs or malignant arrhythmias causing >1 unplanned visit or hospitalization in the past 12 months. |
Severe impairment of exercise capacity with inability to exercise or low 6MWT (<300 m) or pVO2 <12–14 mL/kg/min estimated to be of cardiac origin. |
| [In addition to the above, extra-cardiac organ dysfunction due to heart failure (e.g. cardiac cachexia, kidney, or liver dysfunction) or type 2 pulmonary hypertension may be present, but are not required.] |
Reproduced with permission from Crespo-Leiro et al.5
LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; ARVC, arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy; BNP, brain natriuretic peptide; NT-proBNP, N-terminal-pro-brain natriuretic peptide; LV, left ventricular; ESC, European Society of Cardiology; HFpEF, heart failure with preserved ejection fraction; HFmrEF, heart failure with mid-range ejection fraction; 6MWT, 6-min walk test; PVO2, peak exercise oxygen consumption; RV, right ventricle/ventricular.
Summary particulars of preliminary studies of intermittent levosimendan in advanced heart failure
| References | No. of patients enrolled | Levosimendan dose | Infusion duration (h) | Infusion frequency | Design comparator | Endpoints |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nanas | 36 | Bolus 6 μg then 0.2 μg/kg/min | 24 | 2 weeks | Open-label Dobutamine | Haemodynamics; 45-day survival |
| Parissis | 25 | Bolus 6 μg then 0.1 μg/kg/min to max. 0.4 μg/kg/min | 24 | 3 weeks | Randomized (open-label) Placebo | LVEF, LV dimensions and volumes; levels of NT-proBNP, troponin T, CRP, IL-6 |
| Mavrogeni | 50 | Bolus 6 μg then 0.1 μg/kg/min to max. 0.2 μg/kg/min | 24 | 30 days | Randomized (open-label) Placebo | LVEF, LV dimensions and volumes; symptoms and QoL, RV systolic pressure, mitral regurgitation |
| Berger | 75 | Bolus 12 μg if BP >95 mmHg. then 0.1 μg/kg/min. Infusion-only if BP <95 mmHg | 24 | 4 weeks | Randomized (open-label) Prostaglandin E1 | LVEF, BNP, up-titration of beta-blockers |
| Papadopoulou | 20 | 0.1 μg/kg/min (no loading dose) | 24 | 30 days | Open-label None specified | LVEF and QoL |
| Bonios | 63 | 0.2 μg/kg/min if given with dobutamine; 0.3 μg/kg/min if given alone | 6 | Weekly | Randomized (open-label) Dobutamine | Haemodynamics, survival/freedom from LVAD at 3 and 6 months |
| Malfatto | 33 | 0.1 μg/kg/min with hourly 0.1 μg/kg/min increments to max. 0.4 μg/kg/min | 24 | 30 days | Randomized (open-label) Furosemide | Haemodynamics, echocardiography, BNP |
From Poelzl et al.14
LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; LV, left ventricular; NT-pro-BNP, pro-N-terminal brain natriuretic peptide; QoL, quality of life; RV, right ventricular; BNP, brain natriuretic peptide.
Summary of patient populations and study protocols in the LevoRep, LION-HEART, and LAICA studies of intermittent levosimendan infusion in advanced heart failure patients
| LevoRep | LION-HEART | LAICA | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ( | ( | ( | |
| Baseline clinical status | NYHA Class III or IV for >3 months | NYHA Class III or IV for >4 weeks | NYHA Class III or IV |
| Enrolment criteria | LVEF <35% | LVEF <35%Episode of pulmonary or systemic congestion requiring i.v. vasoactive drugs within previous 12 months | One of:
LVEF <35% Diastolic function ≥Grade III PCWP ≥16 mmHg and/or CVP ≥12 mmHg NT-proBNP >3000 ng/mL More than one HF hospitalization with 6 months |
| Levosimendan schedule | 0.2 μg/kg/min for 6 h every 2 weeks (total of 4 cycles) | 0.2 μg/kg/min for 6 h every 2 weeks (total of 6 cycles) | 0.1 μg/kg/min for 24 h every 30 days |
| Duration | 24 weeks | 52 weeks | Median 24 weeks, maximum 52 weeks |
Derived from references 22–24.
CVP, central venous pressure; HF, heart failure; i.v., intravenous; LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; NT-proBNP, N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide; NYHA, New York Heart Association; PCWP, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure.