| Literature DB >> 33839989 |
Osama Soliman1, Kadir Caliskan2, Hagar Elsherbini3,4, Casper Zijderhand3, Mattie Lenzen3, Sanne E Hoeks3, Rasha Kaddoura5, Mohamed Izham6, Abdulaziz Alkhulaifi7, Amr S Omar7,8,9.
Abstract
We sought to synthesize the available evidence regarding safety and efficacy of intermittent levosimendan (LEVO) infusions in ambulatory patients with end-stage heart failure (HF). Safety and efficacy of ambulatory intermittent LEVO infusion in patients with end-stage HF are yet not established. We systematically searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, SCOPUS, Web of Science, and Cochrane databases, from inception to January 30, 2021 for studies reporting outcome of adult ambulatory patients with end-stage HF treated with intermittent LEVO infusion. Fifteen studies (8 randomized and 7 observational) comprised 984 patients (LEVO [N = 727] and controls [N = 257]) met the inclusion criteria. LEVO was associated with improved New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class (weighted mean difference [WMD] -1.04, 95%CI: -1.70 to -0.38, p < 0.001, 5 studies, I2 = 93%), improved left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (WMD 4.0%, 95%CI: 2.8% to 5.3%, p < 0.001, 6 studies, I2 = 9%), and reduced BNP levels (WMD -549 pg/mL, 95%CI -866 to -233, p < 0001, 3 studies, I2 = 66%). All-cause death was not different (RR 0.65, 95%CI: 0.38 to 1.093, p = 0.10, 6 studies, I2 = 0), but cardiovascular death was lower on LEVO (RR 0.34, 95%CI: 0.13 to 0.87, p = 0.02, 3 studies, I2 = 0) compared to controls. Furthermore, health-related quality of life (HRQoL) was improved alongside with reduced LV size following LEVO infusions. Major adverse events were not different between LEVO and placebo. In conclusion, intermittent LEVO infusions in ambulatory patients with end-stage HF is associated with less frequent cardiovascular death alongside with improved NYHA class, quality of life, BNP levels, and LV function. However, the current evidence is limited by heterogeneous and relatively small studies.Entities:
Keywords: Ambulatory; Efficacy; Functional capacity; Heart failure; Levosimendan; Safety; Survival
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33839989 PMCID: PMC8898255 DOI: 10.1007/s10741-021-10101-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heart Fail Rev ISSN: 1382-4147 Impact factor: 4.214
Fig. 1PRISMA flowchart of selection of studies for inclusion
Fig. 2Central Illustration. Meta-analysis of effects of Levosimendan infusion versus baseline on risk of all-cause death (a); risk of cardiovascular mortality (b); changes in New York Heart Failure Association (NYHA) functional class (c); changes in brain natriuretic peptide (BNP, d); and changes in left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF, e)
Metadata of the 15 studies included in the systematic review and meta-analysis
| Author | Date of Publication | Journal | Acronym | Database |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Altenberger et al. | 2014 | European Journal of Heart Failure | LevoRep | Embase |
| Berger et al. | 2006 | The European Journal of Heart Failure | NA | Embase |
| Bonios et al. | 2011 | International Journal of Cardiology | NA | Embase |
| Comín-Colet et al. | 2018 | European Journal of Heart Failure | LION-HEART | Embase |
| Drakos et al. | 2008 | Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology | NA | Embase |
| Malfatto et al. | 2012 | Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology | NA | Embase |
| Mavrogeni et al. | 2007 | Journal of Cardiac Failure | NA | Embase |
| Najjar et al. | 2018 | ESC Heart Failure | NA | Embase |
| Nanas et al. | 2015 | The American Journal of Cardiology | NA | Embase |
| Oliva et al. | 2018 | International Journal of Cardiology | NA | Embase |
| Ortis et al. | 2016 | Journal of International Medical Research | NA | Embase |
| Papadopoulou et al. | 2009 | Hellenic J Cardiol | NA | Embase |
| Parissis et al. | 2006 | Cardiovascular Medicine | NA | Embase |
| Parle et al. | 2008 | Heart, Lung and Circulation | NA | Embase |
| Tasal et al. | 2014 | Medical Science Monitor | NA | Embase |
NA not available
Methodology of the 15 studies included in the systematic review—study design, demographics, and comparator arm
| Author | Publication year | Study design | No of patients | (%male) | Ischemic etiology | Comparator | Study duration (months) | Interim analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Altenberger et al. | 2014 | RCT | 120 | 79% | 62% | Placebo | 6 | 2 |
| Berger et al. | 2006 | RCT | 75 | 82% | NR | PGE1 | 12 | 3 |
| Bonios et al. | 2011 | RCT | 63 | NR | NR | Dobutamine | 6 | |
| Comín-Colet et al. | 2018 | RCT | 69 | NR | NR | Placebo | 6 | 3 (1ry) |
| Drakos et al.a | 2008 | CS | 162 | 93% | 54% | OMT | 6 | |
| Malfatto et al. | 2012 | RCT | 33 | 73% | 77% | Furosemide | 12 | 4 |
| Mavrogeni et al. | 2007 | RCT | 50 | 80% | 52% | SOC | 6 | |
| Najjar et al. | 2018 | CS | 23 | 83% | NR | No comparator | 24Hrs | |
| Nanas et al. | 2015 | RCT | 36 | 94% | NR | Dobutamine | 3 | |
| Oliva et al. | 2018 | PR | 185 | 80% | 60% | No comparator | 6 | |
| Ortis et al. | 2016 | CCS | 50 | 72% | 76% | No LEVO | 12 | 6 |
| Papadopoulou et al. | 2009 | CS | 20 | 90% | 80% | No comparator | 6 | |
| Parissis et al. | 2006 | RCT | 25 | 92% | 84% | Placebo | 4a | |
| Parle et al. | 2008 | CS | 44 | NR | 48% | No comparator | 48 | |
| Tasal et al. | 2014 | CS | 29 | 69% | NR | #No comparator | 6 |
RCT randomized control trial, CS cohort study, CCS cross sectional, PGE1 prostaglandin E1, NR not reported, LEVO levosimendan, OMT optimal medical therapy, SOC standard of care
a114 days
Methodology of the 15 studies included in the systematic review—infusion protocol
| Author | Study duration (months) | No of cycles | Frequency of infusions | Duration of infusion | Levosimendan loading dose (LD) | Levosimendan maintenance dose (MD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Altenberger et al. | 6 Months | 4 | Bi-monthly | 6 h | No loading dose | 0.2 µg/kg/min |
| Berger et al. | 12 Months | 3 | Monthly | 24 h | if SBP ≥ 95 mmHg, a LD of 12 μg/kg for 10 min | Rate of 0.1 μg/kg/min for 24 h |
| Bonios et al. | 6 Months | 24 | Weekly | 6-h | No loading dose | 0.3 µg/kg/min LEVO & DOB 10 mg/kg/min + LEVO 0.2 mg/kg/min |
| Comín-Colet et al. | 3 Months: 1ry 6 Months: 2nry | 6 | Bi-monthly | 6-h | No loading dose | 0.2 µg/kg/min |
| Drakos et al. | 6 Months | 24 | Weekly | 8-h | No loading dose | 10 µg/kg/min DOB or 0.3 µg/kg/min LEVO, or both |
| Malfatto et al. | 12 Months | 4 | Monthly | 24-h | No loading dose | 0.1 to 0.4 mg/kg/min (max 12.5 mg per session) |
| Mavrogeni et al. | 6 Months | 6 | Monthly | 24-h | No loading dose | 0.2 µg/kg/min |
| Najjar et al. | 24 h | 1 | - | 24-h | No loading dose | 0.1 µg/kg/min |
| Nanas et al. | 3 M | 6 | Bi-Monthly | 24-h | First 24 h DOB infusion, then a 6 mg/kg IV bolus of LEVO | 6 mg/kg bolus LEVO IV, followed by a 24-h infusion of 0.2 µg/kg/min |
| Oliva et al. | 6 Months | 6 | Monthly | 24-h | No loading dose | 0.05 to 0.2 µg/kg/min |
| Ortis et al. | 12 Months | 12 | Monthly | 24-to 48-h | No loading dose | 0.1—0.2 µg/kg/min (max 12.5 mg); cycle of 3 infusions (12.5 mg) for 24–48 hrs |
| Papadopoulou et al. | 6 Months | 6 | Monthly | 24-h | No loading dose | 0.1 mg/kg/min |
| Parissis et al. | 4a Months | 5 | 3 weeks | 24-h | First 10-min IV bolus of 6 µg/kg | 5 cycles of 24 h infusion at 0.1 µg/kg/min |
| Parle et al. | 48 Months | 2–26 | Mean 66.2 (12.0) days | 24 h | First 10-min IV bolus of 6–12 µg/kg | a 24 h of 0.1 µg/kg/min uptitrated hourly (max 0.4 µg/kg/min) |
| Tasal et al. | 6 Months | 3 vs 1 | Single vs monthly | 24 h | First 10-min IV bolus of 6 µg /kg | Main rate of 0.1 µg/kg/min |
For abbreviations, see Table 1
a114 days
Summary of events and key characteristics of the 9 studies who reported mortality following levosimendan intermittent infusions
| Author | No of patients | Comparator | Study duration (months) | Mortality reported | LEV-events | LEVO-total | Control-events | Control-total | Survival OR | Survival CI | Survival |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Included in the meta-analysis | |||||||||||
| Altenberger et al. | 120 | Placebo | 6 | Yes | 1 | 63 | 4 | 57 | 0.21 | 0.02–1.97 | NS |
| Berger et al. | 75 | PGE1 | 12 | Yes | 6 | 39 | 7 | 36 | 0.75 | 0.23–2.51 | NS |
| Comín-Colet et al. | 69 | Placebo | 6 | Yes | 14 | 48 | 7 | 21 | 0.82 | 0.27–2.47 | NS |
| Malfatto et al. | 33 | Furosemide | 12 | Yes | 4 | 22 | 4 | 11 | 0.39 | 0.08–2.00 | NS |
| Mavrogeni et al. | 50 | SOC | 6 | Yes | 2 | 25 | 8 | 25 | 0.18 | 0.03–0.98 | < 0.05 |
| Ortis et al. | 50 | No LEVO | 12 | Yes | 3 | 25 | 2 | 25 | 1.5 | NR | NS |
| Not included in the meta-analysis | |||||||||||
| Bonios et al. | 63 | Dobutamine | 6 | Yes | 14 | 42 | 8 | 21 | 0.81 | 0.27–2.42 | NS |
| Drakos et al.a | 162 | OMT | 6 | Yes | 19 | 29 | 20 | 22 | 0.72 | NR | *NR |
| Tasal et al. | 29 | Noneb | 6 | Yes | 0 | 29 | 0 | NR | NR | NR | NR |
CS cross sectional, OMT optimal medical therapy, SOC standard of care, NR not reported or not relevant, RCT randomized control trial
*p < 0.001 for inotropic vs SOC)
ain Drakos et al., Intravenous inotropic versus standard of care were compared. The inotropic patients comprised 3 subgroups (Levosimendan alone, Dobutamine alone, and a combination of both)
bPatients on repeated vs single dose Levosimendan were compared
Risk of bias assessment of studies included in the in the systematic review and meta-analysis
| Meta-data | Methodology | Outcomes LEVO vs control | Newcastle-Ottawa scale | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author (year) | Publication date | Study design | Cohorts comparability at baseline | Renal function comparability at baseline | Adequately powered | Survival | Hospitalization | Selection | Comparability | Outcome | Quality |
| Altenberger et al. | 2014 | + + | + | - | (63 vs 57) | ↑ | NR | **** | * | * | Poor |
| Berger et al. | 2006 | + - | + | NR | (39 vs 36) | = | NR | **** | * | ** | Good |
| Bonios et al. | 2011 | + - | + | + | (21 vs 21 vs 21) | ↑ | NR | **** | * | * | Poor |
| Comín-Colet et al. | 2018 | + + | + | NR | (48 vs 21) | = | ↑ | **** | ** | * | Poor |
| Drakos et al. | 2008 | + - | - | NR | (140 vs 22) | ↑ | NR | **** | - | * | Poor |
| Malfatto et al. | 2012 | + - | + | + | (22 vs 11) | ↑ | NR | **** | * | ** | Good |
| Mavrogeni et al. | 2007 | + - | + | NR | (25 vs 25) | NR | NR | **** | * | *** | Good |
| Najjar et al. | 2018 | + - | NA | + | −23 | NR | NR | **** | - | - | Poor |
| Nanas et al. | 2015 | + - | - | + | (18 vs 18) | NR | NR | **** | - | * | Poor |
| Oliva et al. | 2018 | - + | NA | NR | −185 | NR | ↑ | **** | - | ** | Poor |
| Ortis et al. | 2016 | – | + | + | (25 vs 25) | = | NR | **** | * | * | Poor |
| Papadopoulou et al. | 2009 | + - | NA | NR | −20 | NR | NR | **** | - | * | Poor |
| Parissis et al. | 2006 | + - | + | + | (17 vs 8) | NR | NR | **** | * | *** | Good |
| Parle et al. | 2008 | + - | + | + | −44 | NR | NR | **** | * | * | Poor |
| Tasal et al. | 2014 | + - | + | NR | (16 vs 13) | ↑ | NR | **** | * | *** | Good |
Study design: prospective (+); retrospective (-); single centre (-), multicentre (+)
Cohort comparability at baseline: (+) means comparable; NA = not applicable; (-) is not comparable
NA not available, NR not reported
Heterogeneity between studies included in the meta-analysis regarding different outcome variables
| Outcome | Heterogeneity | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All-cause mortality | 3,736 | 5 | 0,588 | 0,000 | Low |
| Cardiovascular mortality | 0,581 | 2 | 0,748 | 0,000 | Low |
| NYHA (3–12 m) | 173,328 | 4 | 0,000 | 97,692 | High |
| BNP regardless follow-up (6–48 m) | 30,350 | 4 | 0,000 | 86,820 | High |
| LVEF regardless follow-up duration (3–12 months) | 4,980 | 6 | 0,546 | 0,000 | Low |
NYHA New York Heart Failure Association, LVEF left ventricular ejection fraction, BNP brain natriuretic peptide