| Literature DB >> 31783891 |
Bernard Cholley1,2,3, Bruno Levy4, Jean-Luc Fellahi5,6, Dan Longrois7,8, Julien Amour9,10, Alexandre Ouattara11,12,13, Alexandre Mebazaa8,14.
Abstract
Despite interesting and unique pharmacological properties, levosimendan has not proven a clear superiority to placebo in the patient populations that have been enrolled in the various recent multicenter randomized controlled trials. However, the pharmacodynamic effects of levosimendan are still considered potentially very useful in a number of specific situations.Patients with decompensated heart failure requiring inotropic support and receiving beta-blockers represent the most widely accepted indication. Repeated infusions of levosimendan are increasingly used to facilitate weaning from dobutamine and avoid prolonged hospitalizations in patients with end-stage heart failure, awaiting heart transplantation or left ventricular assist device implantation. New trials are under way to confirm or refute the potential usefulness of levosimendan to facilitate weaning from veno-arterial ECMO, to treat cardiogenic shock due to left or right ventricular failure because the current evidence is mostly retrospective and requires confirmation with better-designed studies. Takotsubo syndrome may represent an ideal target for this non-adrenergic inotrope, but this statement also relies on expert opinion. There is no benefit from levosimendan in patients with septic shock. The two large trials evaluating the prophylactic administration of levosimendan (pharmacological preconditioning) in cardiac surgical patients with poor left ventricular ejection fraction could not show a significant reduction in their composite endpoints reflecting low cardiac output syndrome with respect to placebo. However, the subgroup of those who underwent isolated CABG appeared to have a reduction in mortality. A new study will be required to confirm this exploratory finding.Levosimendan remains a potentially useful inodilator agent in a number of specific situations due to its unique pharmacological properties. More studies are needed to provide a higher level of proof regarding these indications.Entities:
Keywords: Beta-blocker; Cardiogenic shock; Catecholamine; Heart failure; Levosimendan
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31783891 PMCID: PMC6883606 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-019-2674-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Theoretical clinical characteristics of an ideal positive inotropic agent (from [25])
| Easy titration for rapid on/off effect | |
| Myocardial oxygen supply/demand balance | |
| Steady effect in time (no tachyphylaxis) | |
| Direct positive inotropic effect | |
| β-independent positive inotropic stimulation | |
| Few or no arrhythmogenic effect | |
| No intracellular calcium overload | |
| Maintenance of the coronary perfusion pressure | |
| Beneficial effects on regional vascular beds | |
| Reasonable benefit/risk balance |