Conference Coverage

HFSA: Emphasizing "acute" in acute decompensated heart failure


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM THE HFSA ANNUAL SCIENTIFIC MEETING

References

He itemized five distinct types of acute heart failure patients based on their precipitating triggers of decompensation:

• Rapid arrhythmia or rhythm disturbance.

• Hypertension emergency.

• Pulmonary embolism.

• Pulmonary infection.

• Mechanical cause of acute heart failure.

“We need to clinically profile” patients into these subgroups to better tailor management, he said.

Another important aspect of patient heterogeneity is that fluid congestion may be less important in many patients compared with fluid redistribution from the splanchnic circulation. This distinction is important because fluid redistribution may be better treated with a vasodilator than with a diuretic, he noted. He voiced hope that two phase III trials now in progress with two unique vasodilator drugs, the TRUE-AHF trial of ularitide, and the RELAX-AHF-2 trial of serelaxin, may identify two new vasodilators with “unique effects” that could potentially launch a new era in management of selected patients with acute heart failure. Dr. Packer, the principal investigator for the ularitide trial, offered similar hope.

The responsiveness of acute heart failure patients to in-hospital treatment may vary depending on what end-organ damage they experience, Dr. Ponikowski said.

Dr. Alexandre Mebazaa Mitchel L. Zoler/Frontline Medical News

Dr. Alexandre Mebazaa

This end-organ damage is often an acute process occurring during hospitalization caused by the fluid congestion and redistribution that occurs during acute heart failure, said Dr. Alexandre Mebazaa, professor of anesthesiology and critical care medicine at Lariboisière Hospital in Paris.

“Fluid overload leads to organ dysfunction. In the past, we thought that kidney dysfunction [occurring during acute heart failure] was due to low cardiac output, but we know that dysfunction in the kidney and liver is due to congestion, and diuretics do not remove water from the liver and kidney,” Dr. Mebazaa said in an interview. “Diuretics may remove fluid from vessels, but not from organs. We need new approaches to remove fluid from organs – from the kidney, liver, and lungs” – during acute heart failure. This is another reason why heart failure physicians are excited about the possibility of finding new vasodilators, such a ularitide and serelaxin, that might address the issue of venous congestion in peripheral organs.

Faster management endorsed by U.S. clinicians, too

Dr. Mariell L. Jessup

Dr. Mariell L. Jessup

“We used to think that the reason why patients with acute heart failure were not voiding well and became diuretic resistant was because of poor cardiac output. Now we know that there is a lot of venous congestion with an impact on the liver and kidneys,” agreed Dr. Mariell L. Jessup, professor and medical director of the Penn Heart and Vascular Center at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. “We’ve begun to appreciate how important venous congestion is in causing high pressures on the right side” of the circulatory system, she said in an interview.

Other U.S. physicians echo the call by Dr. Packer and the European cardiologists for faster treatment of acute heart failure. “I collected data at U.S. hospitals and found it took an average of 22 hours for decompensated heart failure patients to receive treatment,” said Dr. Maria Rosa Costanzo, medical director of the heart failure and pulmonary hypertension program at Advocate Heart Institute in Naperville, Ill. “I have tried to convey the message that these patients must be treated early, and this is associated with better outcomes,” she said in an interview during the HFSA meeting.

Dr. Maria Rosa Costanzo

Dr. Maria Rosa Costanzo

“Early treatment means at least two doses of intravenous diuretic in the emergency department. We’ve seen that the two immediate doses can make a big difference, producing shorter lengths of stay in the intensive care unit, fewer rehospitalizations, and fewer deaths,” according to data collected in the ADHERE (Acute Decompensated Heart Failure National Registry), she said. “But this has not yet been picked up in a lot of U.S. practice.” Although the hemodynamic abnormalities that lead up to an acute decompensation event can take several weeks of steady worsening before severe symptoms drive a patient to the hospital, once the patient requires hospitalization “it should be treated as an emergency,” she said.

Dr. Costanzo is a major advocate for using ultrafiltration as a second-line treatment for acute decompensated heart failure patients who do not adequately respond to diuretic treatment, but for the time being, ultrafiltration remains a controversial option that at least some other heart failure physicians do not endorse, and it can involve reimbursement issues as many insurers consider it investigational.

Dr. Christopher M. O'Connor Mitchel L. Zoler/Frontline Medical News

Dr. Christopher M. O'Connor

“Try to get the patient decongested within the first 6 hours [after arrival at the hospital] or even sooner, within the first 1-2 hours,” recommended Dr. Christopher M. O’Connor, chief executive officer of Inova Heart and Vascular Institute in Falls Church, Va. He suggested treating patients with a combination of diuretics and vasodilators. “Some people are talking about instituting a performance measure for treating acute heart failure within the first 6 hours,” Dr. O’Connor said in an interview.

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