Article Type
Changed
Fri, 01/18/2019 - 12:45
Display Headline
Heart failure guidelines: New hope in medical therapy

The newest heart failure management guidelines make a bold statement: Heart failure should no longer be considered a death sentence, but can instead be managed in a way that may add years of quality life for some patients.

“With optimal therapy applied to the right patient in the right manner at the right time, the risk of death can be markedly reduced, perhaps by as much as 50%. Treating fewer than 10 patients with all the correct therapies will easily save at least one life and one or more hospitalizations. Those are real benefits that dwarf the benefit of many of our other cardiovascular therapies,” said Dr. Clyde W. Yancy, chair of the joint guidelines writing committee. The document was published in the June 5 online edition of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (2013 [doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2013.05.019]).

    Dr. Clyde W. Yancy

"For so long, we had assumed that, by definition, heart failure was a fatal diagnosis – that all we could do was tell patients to get their affairs in order and perhaps make them feel a little better, but that death was almost a fait accompli," said Dr. Yancy, the Magerstadt Professor of Medicine and chief of cardiology at Northwestern University, Chicago. "But, in the past few years, a lot of tough work has been done showing there are effective therapies and that when given correctly, major improvements in survival do occur."

A joint effort of the American College of Cardiology Foundation and the American Heart Association, the 2013 Heart Failure Guidelines represent the first update on the topic since 2009, Dr. Yancy said in an interview. Although the years between the documents are few, the strides in research have been many, he said.

"The emergence of new and important datasets generated the impetus for the 2013 guideline not as an update, but as a complete rewrite. All of the previously extant clinical practice guideline statements were subject to reanalysis, a change in level of evidence and most importantly, a change in the class of recommendation," he said.

The document is among the first in the United States to employ the concept of guideline-directed medical therapy (GDMT) – a new designation that allows clinicians to easily determine the best course of heart failure care for an individual patient. Schematic algorithms provide easy-to-follow treatment pathways that should be helpful for anyone who treats heart failure patients, from specialist to primary care provider, said Dr. Yancy.

A major focus of the guideline is treating heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), with the goal of preventing or delaying progression. HFpEF is "a real entity" that constitutes about half of heart failure diagnoses, Dr. Yancy said, but as yet, has no specific intervention.

Until research provides further answers, the best way to manage HFpEF is holistically. "About 90% of these patients have comorbid conditions like hypertension, coronary artery disease, diabetes, renal insufficiency and atrial fibrillation. In the absence of a specific intervention for HFpEF, focusing on these other conditions will provide us the opportunity to modify the natural history of this disease."

Dr. David E. Lanfear, a cardiologist specializing in advanced heart failure and transplantation at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, said the guidelines on HFpEF “are very reasonable. The recommendations appear similar to those in previous statements, on blood pressure control, volume control for symptoms, atrial fibrillation, and ischemia, without endorsing specific medications. The statement also eloquently points out the ways in which HFpEF represents a huge gap in the knowledge base.

The guidelines contain "critical" new indications for the use of aldosterone antagonists, Dr. Yancy said. The drugs saw a surge in use in the early 2000s, but the rush to embrace them brought challenges as well. "Some of the applications led to missteps resulting in elevated potassium levels and emergency admissions," Dr. Yancy said. Since then, additional trials have pinpointed the best ways to use aldosterone agonists in patients who have heart failure with reduced ejection fraction or cardiac injury after heart attack. Data now confirm their benefit in patients with mild and moderate disease, as well as those with more advanced disease.

"This is the first document in the United States to embrace the benefit of aldosterone antagonists for these patients," Dr. Yancy said. Provided that patient renal function is "reasonably intact," the drugs are a valuable addition to GDMT.

The guidelines also offer a refinement of the recommendations for cardiac resynchronization device therapy – another change supported by the results of recent, large-scale trials. "We now have three separate, well-done trials that suggest a significant benefit of cardiac resynchronization in patients with mild to moderate disease," Dr. Yancy said.

 

 

In addition to recommending the treatment for patients with mild to moderate disease, the guideline targets it more specifically. "We gave the greatest strength of recommendation for patients with a wide QRS interval and left bundle branch block, a modest recommendation for patients with a less wide interval, and an equivocal recommendation for those without left bundle branch block. We think this will allow better discrimination of those who are most likely to benefit from CRT from those unlikely to benefit."

There are also more plentiful data in favor of mechanical circulatory support for patients with advanced heart failure. "This is no longer a proof of concept strategy," Dr. Yancy said. "Left ventricular assist devices for advanced chronic heart failure represent an important component of a contemporary treatment algorithm for heart failure."

The guideline even reaches past the mechanics of heart failure into its possible genetic origins. "We’ve discovered that idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy may not really be idiopathic, but instead related to genetic abnormality. We’ve coalesced observations and data from this emerging field to come up with recommendations about when we might consider genetic testing in patients and screening in family members. It’s something new, and we’re delighted that it’s presented in this document."

The guidelines also offer a new outlook on reducing heart failure readmissions – a problem that comes with a $25 billion/year price tag, Dr. Yancy said. Four simple, low-tech interventions stood out as practical and effective:

• Using in-hospital systems that identify heart failure patients appropriate for GDMT and prompt physicians to advance this care and assess response.

• Developing transitional care and discharge planning that emphasizes patient education to increase treatment compliance, manage comorbid conditions effectively, and tackle psychosocial barriers to care.

• Harnessing the cooperative power of a nurse-led multidisciplinary heart failure disease management program.

• Following up every patient with a phone call within 3 days of discharge and a physician appointment within 2 weeks.

"The beauty of this is that while everyone is looking for the silver bullet to decrease readmission – including high-tech interventions like device implantation and home electronic monitoring – we believe that these simple, straightforward, evidence-based approaches will work."

Finally, Dr. Yancy said, document places great importance on patient-centric outcomes like quality-of-life issues, shared decision-making, care coordination, and palliative care. Over the past decade, the physician/patient relationship has changed from almost paternalistic to an active partnership. "We need to include the patient’s point of view in this whole process. We need to put a greater emphasis on quality of life, and we need not fear a discussion on quality of death."

Dr. Yancy expressed a firm belief that integrating the guidelines into daily practice could have an enormous impact on the way heart failure patients are treated.

"We have come so far in our understanding and ability to treat these patients. These are dramatically effective interventions. We can shift the culture to the belief that heart failure is something that we can treat – to the idea that you can help your patients feel better and live longer. If we use this correctly, we can make a difference."

Dr. Yancy had no financial declarations.

msullivan@frontlinemedcom.com

Author and Disclosure Information

Publications
Topics
Legacy Keywords
heart failure management guidelines, medical therapy, improve survival, Dr. Clyde W. Yancy, Journal of the American College of Cardiology, heart failure, American College of Cardiology Foundation, American Heart Association, 2013 Heart Failure Guidelines, guideline-directed medical therapy,
Author and Disclosure Information

Author and Disclosure Information

The newest heart failure management guidelines make a bold statement: Heart failure should no longer be considered a death sentence, but can instead be managed in a way that may add years of quality life for some patients.

“With optimal therapy applied to the right patient in the right manner at the right time, the risk of death can be markedly reduced, perhaps by as much as 50%. Treating fewer than 10 patients with all the correct therapies will easily save at least one life and one or more hospitalizations. Those are real benefits that dwarf the benefit of many of our other cardiovascular therapies,” said Dr. Clyde W. Yancy, chair of the joint guidelines writing committee. The document was published in the June 5 online edition of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (2013 [doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2013.05.019]).

    Dr. Clyde W. Yancy

"For so long, we had assumed that, by definition, heart failure was a fatal diagnosis – that all we could do was tell patients to get their affairs in order and perhaps make them feel a little better, but that death was almost a fait accompli," said Dr. Yancy, the Magerstadt Professor of Medicine and chief of cardiology at Northwestern University, Chicago. "But, in the past few years, a lot of tough work has been done showing there are effective therapies and that when given correctly, major improvements in survival do occur."

A joint effort of the American College of Cardiology Foundation and the American Heart Association, the 2013 Heart Failure Guidelines represent the first update on the topic since 2009, Dr. Yancy said in an interview. Although the years between the documents are few, the strides in research have been many, he said.

"The emergence of new and important datasets generated the impetus for the 2013 guideline not as an update, but as a complete rewrite. All of the previously extant clinical practice guideline statements were subject to reanalysis, a change in level of evidence and most importantly, a change in the class of recommendation," he said.

The document is among the first in the United States to employ the concept of guideline-directed medical therapy (GDMT) – a new designation that allows clinicians to easily determine the best course of heart failure care for an individual patient. Schematic algorithms provide easy-to-follow treatment pathways that should be helpful for anyone who treats heart failure patients, from specialist to primary care provider, said Dr. Yancy.

A major focus of the guideline is treating heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), with the goal of preventing or delaying progression. HFpEF is "a real entity" that constitutes about half of heart failure diagnoses, Dr. Yancy said, but as yet, has no specific intervention.

Until research provides further answers, the best way to manage HFpEF is holistically. "About 90% of these patients have comorbid conditions like hypertension, coronary artery disease, diabetes, renal insufficiency and atrial fibrillation. In the absence of a specific intervention for HFpEF, focusing on these other conditions will provide us the opportunity to modify the natural history of this disease."

Dr. David E. Lanfear, a cardiologist specializing in advanced heart failure and transplantation at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, said the guidelines on HFpEF “are very reasonable. The recommendations appear similar to those in previous statements, on blood pressure control, volume control for symptoms, atrial fibrillation, and ischemia, without endorsing specific medications. The statement also eloquently points out the ways in which HFpEF represents a huge gap in the knowledge base.

The guidelines contain "critical" new indications for the use of aldosterone antagonists, Dr. Yancy said. The drugs saw a surge in use in the early 2000s, but the rush to embrace them brought challenges as well. "Some of the applications led to missteps resulting in elevated potassium levels and emergency admissions," Dr. Yancy said. Since then, additional trials have pinpointed the best ways to use aldosterone agonists in patients who have heart failure with reduced ejection fraction or cardiac injury after heart attack. Data now confirm their benefit in patients with mild and moderate disease, as well as those with more advanced disease.

"This is the first document in the United States to embrace the benefit of aldosterone antagonists for these patients," Dr. Yancy said. Provided that patient renal function is "reasonably intact," the drugs are a valuable addition to GDMT.

The guidelines also offer a refinement of the recommendations for cardiac resynchronization device therapy – another change supported by the results of recent, large-scale trials. "We now have three separate, well-done trials that suggest a significant benefit of cardiac resynchronization in patients with mild to moderate disease," Dr. Yancy said.

 

 

In addition to recommending the treatment for patients with mild to moderate disease, the guideline targets it more specifically. "We gave the greatest strength of recommendation for patients with a wide QRS interval and left bundle branch block, a modest recommendation for patients with a less wide interval, and an equivocal recommendation for those without left bundle branch block. We think this will allow better discrimination of those who are most likely to benefit from CRT from those unlikely to benefit."

There are also more plentiful data in favor of mechanical circulatory support for patients with advanced heart failure. "This is no longer a proof of concept strategy," Dr. Yancy said. "Left ventricular assist devices for advanced chronic heart failure represent an important component of a contemporary treatment algorithm for heart failure."

The guideline even reaches past the mechanics of heart failure into its possible genetic origins. "We’ve discovered that idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy may not really be idiopathic, but instead related to genetic abnormality. We’ve coalesced observations and data from this emerging field to come up with recommendations about when we might consider genetic testing in patients and screening in family members. It’s something new, and we’re delighted that it’s presented in this document."

The guidelines also offer a new outlook on reducing heart failure readmissions – a problem that comes with a $25 billion/year price tag, Dr. Yancy said. Four simple, low-tech interventions stood out as practical and effective:

• Using in-hospital systems that identify heart failure patients appropriate for GDMT and prompt physicians to advance this care and assess response.

• Developing transitional care and discharge planning that emphasizes patient education to increase treatment compliance, manage comorbid conditions effectively, and tackle psychosocial barriers to care.

• Harnessing the cooperative power of a nurse-led multidisciplinary heart failure disease management program.

• Following up every patient with a phone call within 3 days of discharge and a physician appointment within 2 weeks.

"The beauty of this is that while everyone is looking for the silver bullet to decrease readmission – including high-tech interventions like device implantation and home electronic monitoring – we believe that these simple, straightforward, evidence-based approaches will work."

Finally, Dr. Yancy said, document places great importance on patient-centric outcomes like quality-of-life issues, shared decision-making, care coordination, and palliative care. Over the past decade, the physician/patient relationship has changed from almost paternalistic to an active partnership. "We need to include the patient’s point of view in this whole process. We need to put a greater emphasis on quality of life, and we need not fear a discussion on quality of death."

Dr. Yancy expressed a firm belief that integrating the guidelines into daily practice could have an enormous impact on the way heart failure patients are treated.

"We have come so far in our understanding and ability to treat these patients. These are dramatically effective interventions. We can shift the culture to the belief that heart failure is something that we can treat – to the idea that you can help your patients feel better and live longer. If we use this correctly, we can make a difference."

Dr. Yancy had no financial declarations.

msullivan@frontlinemedcom.com

The newest heart failure management guidelines make a bold statement: Heart failure should no longer be considered a death sentence, but can instead be managed in a way that may add years of quality life for some patients.

“With optimal therapy applied to the right patient in the right manner at the right time, the risk of death can be markedly reduced, perhaps by as much as 50%. Treating fewer than 10 patients with all the correct therapies will easily save at least one life and one or more hospitalizations. Those are real benefits that dwarf the benefit of many of our other cardiovascular therapies,” said Dr. Clyde W. Yancy, chair of the joint guidelines writing committee. The document was published in the June 5 online edition of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (2013 [doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2013.05.019]).

    Dr. Clyde W. Yancy

"For so long, we had assumed that, by definition, heart failure was a fatal diagnosis – that all we could do was tell patients to get their affairs in order and perhaps make them feel a little better, but that death was almost a fait accompli," said Dr. Yancy, the Magerstadt Professor of Medicine and chief of cardiology at Northwestern University, Chicago. "But, in the past few years, a lot of tough work has been done showing there are effective therapies and that when given correctly, major improvements in survival do occur."

A joint effort of the American College of Cardiology Foundation and the American Heart Association, the 2013 Heart Failure Guidelines represent the first update on the topic since 2009, Dr. Yancy said in an interview. Although the years between the documents are few, the strides in research have been many, he said.

"The emergence of new and important datasets generated the impetus for the 2013 guideline not as an update, but as a complete rewrite. All of the previously extant clinical practice guideline statements were subject to reanalysis, a change in level of evidence and most importantly, a change in the class of recommendation," he said.

The document is among the first in the United States to employ the concept of guideline-directed medical therapy (GDMT) – a new designation that allows clinicians to easily determine the best course of heart failure care for an individual patient. Schematic algorithms provide easy-to-follow treatment pathways that should be helpful for anyone who treats heart failure patients, from specialist to primary care provider, said Dr. Yancy.

A major focus of the guideline is treating heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), with the goal of preventing or delaying progression. HFpEF is "a real entity" that constitutes about half of heart failure diagnoses, Dr. Yancy said, but as yet, has no specific intervention.

Until research provides further answers, the best way to manage HFpEF is holistically. "About 90% of these patients have comorbid conditions like hypertension, coronary artery disease, diabetes, renal insufficiency and atrial fibrillation. In the absence of a specific intervention for HFpEF, focusing on these other conditions will provide us the opportunity to modify the natural history of this disease."

Dr. David E. Lanfear, a cardiologist specializing in advanced heart failure and transplantation at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, said the guidelines on HFpEF “are very reasonable. The recommendations appear similar to those in previous statements, on blood pressure control, volume control for symptoms, atrial fibrillation, and ischemia, without endorsing specific medications. The statement also eloquently points out the ways in which HFpEF represents a huge gap in the knowledge base.

The guidelines contain "critical" new indications for the use of aldosterone antagonists, Dr. Yancy said. The drugs saw a surge in use in the early 2000s, but the rush to embrace them brought challenges as well. "Some of the applications led to missteps resulting in elevated potassium levels and emergency admissions," Dr. Yancy said. Since then, additional trials have pinpointed the best ways to use aldosterone agonists in patients who have heart failure with reduced ejection fraction or cardiac injury after heart attack. Data now confirm their benefit in patients with mild and moderate disease, as well as those with more advanced disease.

"This is the first document in the United States to embrace the benefit of aldosterone antagonists for these patients," Dr. Yancy said. Provided that patient renal function is "reasonably intact," the drugs are a valuable addition to GDMT.

The guidelines also offer a refinement of the recommendations for cardiac resynchronization device therapy – another change supported by the results of recent, large-scale trials. "We now have three separate, well-done trials that suggest a significant benefit of cardiac resynchronization in patients with mild to moderate disease," Dr. Yancy said.

 

 

In addition to recommending the treatment for patients with mild to moderate disease, the guideline targets it more specifically. "We gave the greatest strength of recommendation for patients with a wide QRS interval and left bundle branch block, a modest recommendation for patients with a less wide interval, and an equivocal recommendation for those without left bundle branch block. We think this will allow better discrimination of those who are most likely to benefit from CRT from those unlikely to benefit."

There are also more plentiful data in favor of mechanical circulatory support for patients with advanced heart failure. "This is no longer a proof of concept strategy," Dr. Yancy said. "Left ventricular assist devices for advanced chronic heart failure represent an important component of a contemporary treatment algorithm for heart failure."

The guideline even reaches past the mechanics of heart failure into its possible genetic origins. "We’ve discovered that idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy may not really be idiopathic, but instead related to genetic abnormality. We’ve coalesced observations and data from this emerging field to come up with recommendations about when we might consider genetic testing in patients and screening in family members. It’s something new, and we’re delighted that it’s presented in this document."

The guidelines also offer a new outlook on reducing heart failure readmissions – a problem that comes with a $25 billion/year price tag, Dr. Yancy said. Four simple, low-tech interventions stood out as practical and effective:

• Using in-hospital systems that identify heart failure patients appropriate for GDMT and prompt physicians to advance this care and assess response.

• Developing transitional care and discharge planning that emphasizes patient education to increase treatment compliance, manage comorbid conditions effectively, and tackle psychosocial barriers to care.

• Harnessing the cooperative power of a nurse-led multidisciplinary heart failure disease management program.

• Following up every patient with a phone call within 3 days of discharge and a physician appointment within 2 weeks.

"The beauty of this is that while everyone is looking for the silver bullet to decrease readmission – including high-tech interventions like device implantation and home electronic monitoring – we believe that these simple, straightforward, evidence-based approaches will work."

Finally, Dr. Yancy said, document places great importance on patient-centric outcomes like quality-of-life issues, shared decision-making, care coordination, and palliative care. Over the past decade, the physician/patient relationship has changed from almost paternalistic to an active partnership. "We need to include the patient’s point of view in this whole process. We need to put a greater emphasis on quality of life, and we need not fear a discussion on quality of death."

Dr. Yancy expressed a firm belief that integrating the guidelines into daily practice could have an enormous impact on the way heart failure patients are treated.

"We have come so far in our understanding and ability to treat these patients. These are dramatically effective interventions. We can shift the culture to the belief that heart failure is something that we can treat – to the idea that you can help your patients feel better and live longer. If we use this correctly, we can make a difference."

Dr. Yancy had no financial declarations.

msullivan@frontlinemedcom.com

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Display Headline
Heart failure guidelines: New hope in medical therapy
Display Headline
Heart failure guidelines: New hope in medical therapy
Legacy Keywords
heart failure management guidelines, medical therapy, improve survival, Dr. Clyde W. Yancy, Journal of the American College of Cardiology, heart failure, American College of Cardiology Foundation, American Heart Association, 2013 Heart Failure Guidelines, guideline-directed medical therapy,
Legacy Keywords
heart failure management guidelines, medical therapy, improve survival, Dr. Clyde W. Yancy, Journal of the American College of Cardiology, heart failure, American College of Cardiology Foundation, American Heart Association, 2013 Heart Failure Guidelines, guideline-directed medical therapy,
Article Source

FROM THE JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY

PURLs Copyright

Inside the Article