| Literature DB >> 33932268 |
Giuseppe M C Rosano1, Brenda Moura2,3, Marco Metra4, Michael Böhm5, Johann Bauersachs6, Tuvia Ben Gal7, Stamatis Adamopoulos8, Magdy Abdelhamid9, Vasiliki Bistola10, Jelena Čelutkienė11, Ovidiu Chioncel12,13, Dimitrios Farmakis14, Roberto Ferrari15,16, Gerasimos Filippatos17, Loreena Hill18, Ewa A Jankowska19, Tiny Jaarsma20,21, Pardeep Jhund22, Mitja Lainscak23,24, Yuri Lopatin25, Lars H Lund26, Davor Milicic27, Wilfried Mullens28,29, Fausto Pinto30, Piotr Ponikowski31, Gianluigi Savarese26, Thomas Thum32, Maurizio Volterrani1, Stefan D Anker33, Petar M Seferovic34,35, Andrew J S Coats36.
Abstract
Despite guideline recommendations and available evidence, implementation of treatment in heart failure (HF) is poor. The majority of patients are not prescribed drugs at target doses that have been proven to positively impact morbidity and mortality. Among others, tolerability issues related to low blood pressure, heart rate, impaired renal function or hyperkalaemia are responsible. Chronic kidney disease plays an important role as it affects up to 50% of patients with HF. Also, dynamic changes in estimated glomerular filtration rate may occur during the course of HF, resulting in inappropriate dose reduction or even discontinuation of decongestive or neurohormonal modulating therapy in clinical practice. As patients with HF are rarely naïve to pharmacologic therapies, the challenge is to adequately prioritize or select the most appropriate up-titration schedule according to patient profile. In this consensus document, we identified nine patient profiles that may be relevant for treatment implementation in HF patients with a reduced ejection fraction. These profiles take into account heart rate (<60 bpm or >70 bpm), the presence of atrial fibrillation, symptomatic low blood pressure, estimated glomerular filtration rate (<30 or >30 mL/min/1.73 m2 ) or hyperkalaemia. The pre-discharge patient, frequently still congestive, is also addressed. A personalized approach, adjusting guideline-directed medical therapy to patient profile, may allow to achieve a better and more comprehensive therapy for each individual patient than the more traditional, forced titration of each drug class before initiating treatment with the next.Entities:
Keywords: Atrial fibrillation; Blood pressure; Chronic kidney disease; Clinical profiles; Guideline-directed medical therapy; Heart failure; Heart rate; Hyperkalaemia; Pre-discharge patient
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33932268 DOI: 10.1002/ejhf.2206
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Heart Fail ISSN: 1388-9842 Impact factor: 17.349