| Literature DB >> 35815257 |
Zachary L Cox1,2, Shuktika Nandkeolyar3, Andrew J Johnson2, JoAnn Lindenfeld3, Aniket S Rali3.
Abstract
Implementation of guideline-directed medical therapy for patients with heart failure is suboptimal. The use of guideline-directed medical therapy improves minimally after heart failure hospitalisation, despite this event clearly indicating increased risk of further hospitalisation and death. In-hospital initiation and titration of guideline-directed medical therapies is one potential strategy to fill these gaps in care, both in the acute vulnerable period after hospital discharge and in the long term. The purpose of this article is to review the knowledge gaps in best practices of in-hospital initiation and up-titration of guideline-directed medical therapies, the benefits and risks of in-hospital initiation and post-discharge focused titration of guideline-directed medical therapies, the recent literature evaluating these practices, and propose strategies to apply these principles to the care of patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction.Entities:
Keywords: Heart failure; guideline-directed medical therapy; in-hospital; initiation; titration
Year: 2022 PMID: 35815257 PMCID: PMC9253962 DOI: 10.15420/cfr.2022.08
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Card Fail Rev ISSN: 2057-7540
Common Initiation and Goal Doses of Guideline-directed Medical Therapy
| Medication | Initial Dose | Goal Dose | Titration Comments* | All-cause Mortality, HR [95% CI]† | Mortality Relative Risk Reduction[ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Captopril | 6.25 mg 3 times daily | 50 mg 3 times daily | Titrate every few days in-hospital and weekly as an outpatient | 0.89 [0.82–0.96] | 17% | |
| Enalapril | 2.5 mg twice daily | 10 mg twice daily | ||||
| Lisinopril | 2.5 mg daily | 40 mg daily | ||||
| Ramipril | 1.25 mg daily | 10 mg daily | ||||
|
| ||||||
| Candesartan | 4 mg daily | 32 mg daily | Titrate every few days in-hospital and weekly as an outpatient | 0.95 [0.88–1.02] | 17% | |
| Losartan | 25 mg daily | 150 mg daily | ||||
| Valsartan | 40 mg twice daily | 160 mg twice daily | ||||
|
| ||||||
| Sacubitril/valsartan | 24/26 mg–49/51 mg twice daily | 97/103 mg twice daily | Titrate every week | 0.75 [0.66–0.85] | 16%‡ | |
|
| ||||||
| Bisoprolol | 1.25–2.5 mg daily | 10 mg daily | Titrate every 2 weeks | 0.78 [0.72–0.84] | 35% | |
| Carvedilol | 3.125 mg twice daily | 25–50 mg twice daily | ||||
| Metoprolol XL | 25 mg daily | 200 mg daily | ||||
|
| ||||||
| Spironolactone | 12.5–25 mg daily | 25–50 mg daily | Titration often not required | 0.76 [0.67–0.85] | 30% | |
| Eplerenone | 25 mg daily | 25–50 mg daily | ||||
|
| ||||||
| Empagliflozin | 10 mg daily | 10 mg daily | Titration not required | 0.88 [0.78–0.99] | 17% | |
| Dapagliflozin | 10 mg daily | 10 mg daily | ||||
|
| ||||||
| ARNI + BB + MRA + SGLT2I | 0.39 [0.31–0.49] | 74% | ||||
*Titration should be as tolerated and guided by clinical parameters. †HR for all-cause mortality relative risk reduction compared with placebo from source: Tromp et al.[
ACEI = angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor; ARB = angiotensin-receptor blocker; ARNI = angiotensin receptor–neprilysin inhibitor; BB = β-blocker; MRA = mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist; SGLT2I = sodium–glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitor.
Questions Regarding Implementation of Guideline-directed Medical Therapies
| Provider Questions Impacting GDMT Initiation or Titration |
|---|
| Prioritisation Questions |
|
Is there a preferential order to how medications should be started? Should I mimic the historical order in which medications were studied in clinical trials? What medication(s) should I prioritise for dose titration? Should I first achieve a goal dose of one medication before starting another medication class? |
| ADHF Hospitalisation Questions |
|
Is in-hospital initiation of medications safe or should I defer to the outpatient clinic? Is it safe to start multiple medications at once or in rapid sequence? What is the minimum interval after initiating/titrating a medication that I should wait before initiating/titrating another medication? Will starting a new medication during IV diuresis increase the risk of worsening kidney function or hypotension? How should I evaluate daily patient changes that impact initiation and up-titration of medications? Should the length of hospitalisation be increased solely to initiate or titrate GDMT? |
| Outpatient Clinic Questions |
|
Should I start a new medication or increase the dose if the patient is clinically stable and feeling well? How frequently should I monitor laboratory values and vital signs during outpatient titration? |
ADHF = acute decompensated heart failure; GDMT = guideline-directed medical therapy.