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Clopidogrel bests ticagrelor head-to-head for elective PCI in ALPHEUS

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Sun, 11/15/2020 - 12:13

Ticagrelor failed to unseat clopidogrel as the guideline-recommended P2Y12 inhibitor of choice in patients undergoing elective percutaneous coronary intervention for stable CAD in the randomized ALPHEUS trial.

“The higher level of platelet inhibition obtained with ticagrelor does not translate into a reduction of periprocedural MI or myocardial injury within 48 hours of high-risk PCI performed in stable coronary patients,” reported Johanne Silvain, MD, PhD, professor of cardiology at the Sorbonne University and director of the ICU at Pitie-Salpetriere Hospital, Paris, at the virtual American Heart Association scientific sessions.

American Heart Association
Dr. Johanne Silvain


Ticagrelor did, however, result in a significantly higher rate of nuisance or minor bleeding than clopidogrel within 30 days post PCI, as well as more frequent dyspnea and treatment discontinuation.

ALPHEUS was an open-label, randomized trial including 1,883 patients undergoing elective PCI for stable coronary disease at 49 French or Czech PCI centers. All participants were either troponin-negative or had a modestly elevated but declining high-sensitivity troponin level. They possessed an average of 3.2 procedure-related or patient-related high-risk features, among the most common of which were multivessel disease, long lesions requiring multiple stents, and diabetes. Patients were randomized to a 300- or 600-mg loading dose of clopidogrel (Kengreal) or 180 mg of ticagrelor (Brilinta) prior to PCI. Afterwards they continued on 90 mg of ticagrelor twice daily or 75 mg of clopidogrel once daily for 30 days. Everyone was also on aspirin.
 

Myonecrosis hypothesis falls flat

The primary endpoint was the occurrence of major myocardial injury, defined as a periprocedural troponin elevated greater than 5 times the upper limit of normal within 48 hours of PCI; type 4a MI, defined as major myocardial injury plus signs or symptoms of ischemia; or stent thrombosis.

The rates were closely similar: 35.5% with ticagrelor, 36.2% with clopidogrel. The bulk of events consisted of major myocardial injury, with an incidence of 26.7% in the ticagrelor group and 27.7% with clopidogrel. Stent thrombosis occurred in 0.3% of patients in each group. Type 4a MI occurred in 8.5% of the ticagrelor group and 8.2% of patients on clopidogrel.

The study hypothesis was that a substantial portion of periprocedural myonecrosis may be thrombotic in nature, and that a stronger P2Y12 inhibitor could reduce the occurrence of these mini-infarcts and thus provide patient benefit. But the hypothesis was not borne out.

“We don’t know if these events are a risk factor or just a marker of risk,” Dr. Silvain said.

There were no between-group differences in major bleeding events at 48 hours or 30 days. However, the rate of nuisance or minor bleeding at 30 days was 11.2% in the ticagrelor arm, significantly higher than the 7.5% incidence with clopidogrel. Moreover, dyspnea occurred in 11.2% of patients on ticagrelor, compared to 0.2% with clopidogrel. Study drug discontinuation was more frequent in the ticagrelor arm: 2.2%, versus 0.4%.

Dr. Silvain also presented a pooled analysis of the 1,883 patients in ALPHEUS plus 781 from the similarly designed SASSICAIA trial, which compared prasugrel (Effient) to clopidogrel. Neither of the more potent P2Y12 inhibitors showed superiority over clopidogrel.

American Heart Association
Dr. Stephen D. Wiviott

Discussant Stephen D. Wiviott, MD, summed things up: “With no evidence for ischemic benefit and higher rates of low-severity bleeding, this trial does not support the use of more potent P2Y12 antagonists for elective PCI. Based on these results, and consistent with SASSICAIA, aspirin with clopidogrel should remain the standard of care in this population.”
 

 

 

Troponin response may vary

A striking finding in ALPHEUS was the discrepancy between very high rates of periprocedural troponin elevation and very low rates of clinical events through 30 days of follow-up. “When you look at these modest elevations of troponin it appears that there is a lot of noise here,” said Dr. Wiviott, vice president for clinical trials research and administration at Massachusetts General Hospital and Brigham and Women’s Hospital and a cardiologist at Harvard Medical School, Boston.

Troponin elevations in stable coronary patients undergoing PCI may have a different underlying mechanism than elevated troponins in patients undergoing PCI for an acute coronary syndrome, he added. In stable CAD patients, the phenomenon may be more related to atherosclerosis than to platelet activation and thrombosis.

During a panel discussion, Sunil V. Rao, MD, said cardiologists are “probably going to have to go back to the drawing board and think about what kinds of events are really, really important.”

American Heart Association
Dr. Sunil V. Rao


“It’s incumbent on our profession to figure out whether periprocedural MI should continue to be a component of the composite endpoint in PCI trials, because it’s highly dependent on the definition that’s being used,” observed Dr. Rao, professor of medicine at Duke University, Durham, N.C.

Dr. Silvain reported receiving institutional research funding and consulting fees from AstraZeneca, which funded the ALPHEUS trial. He serves as a consultant to a handful of other pharmaceutical companies as well.

Simultaneously with Dr. Silvain’s presentation at AHA 2020, the ALPHEUS results were published online in The Lancet.

SOURCE: Silvain J. AHA 2020. Session LBS 3.

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Ticagrelor failed to unseat clopidogrel as the guideline-recommended P2Y12 inhibitor of choice in patients undergoing elective percutaneous coronary intervention for stable CAD in the randomized ALPHEUS trial.

“The higher level of platelet inhibition obtained with ticagrelor does not translate into a reduction of periprocedural MI or myocardial injury within 48 hours of high-risk PCI performed in stable coronary patients,” reported Johanne Silvain, MD, PhD, professor of cardiology at the Sorbonne University and director of the ICU at Pitie-Salpetriere Hospital, Paris, at the virtual American Heart Association scientific sessions.

American Heart Association
Dr. Johanne Silvain


Ticagrelor did, however, result in a significantly higher rate of nuisance or minor bleeding than clopidogrel within 30 days post PCI, as well as more frequent dyspnea and treatment discontinuation.

ALPHEUS was an open-label, randomized trial including 1,883 patients undergoing elective PCI for stable coronary disease at 49 French or Czech PCI centers. All participants were either troponin-negative or had a modestly elevated but declining high-sensitivity troponin level. They possessed an average of 3.2 procedure-related or patient-related high-risk features, among the most common of which were multivessel disease, long lesions requiring multiple stents, and diabetes. Patients were randomized to a 300- or 600-mg loading dose of clopidogrel (Kengreal) or 180 mg of ticagrelor (Brilinta) prior to PCI. Afterwards they continued on 90 mg of ticagrelor twice daily or 75 mg of clopidogrel once daily for 30 days. Everyone was also on aspirin.
 

Myonecrosis hypothesis falls flat

The primary endpoint was the occurrence of major myocardial injury, defined as a periprocedural troponin elevated greater than 5 times the upper limit of normal within 48 hours of PCI; type 4a MI, defined as major myocardial injury plus signs or symptoms of ischemia; or stent thrombosis.

The rates were closely similar: 35.5% with ticagrelor, 36.2% with clopidogrel. The bulk of events consisted of major myocardial injury, with an incidence of 26.7% in the ticagrelor group and 27.7% with clopidogrel. Stent thrombosis occurred in 0.3% of patients in each group. Type 4a MI occurred in 8.5% of the ticagrelor group and 8.2% of patients on clopidogrel.

The study hypothesis was that a substantial portion of periprocedural myonecrosis may be thrombotic in nature, and that a stronger P2Y12 inhibitor could reduce the occurrence of these mini-infarcts and thus provide patient benefit. But the hypothesis was not borne out.

“We don’t know if these events are a risk factor or just a marker of risk,” Dr. Silvain said.

There were no between-group differences in major bleeding events at 48 hours or 30 days. However, the rate of nuisance or minor bleeding at 30 days was 11.2% in the ticagrelor arm, significantly higher than the 7.5% incidence with clopidogrel. Moreover, dyspnea occurred in 11.2% of patients on ticagrelor, compared to 0.2% with clopidogrel. Study drug discontinuation was more frequent in the ticagrelor arm: 2.2%, versus 0.4%.

Dr. Silvain also presented a pooled analysis of the 1,883 patients in ALPHEUS plus 781 from the similarly designed SASSICAIA trial, which compared prasugrel (Effient) to clopidogrel. Neither of the more potent P2Y12 inhibitors showed superiority over clopidogrel.

American Heart Association
Dr. Stephen D. Wiviott

Discussant Stephen D. Wiviott, MD, summed things up: “With no evidence for ischemic benefit and higher rates of low-severity bleeding, this trial does not support the use of more potent P2Y12 antagonists for elective PCI. Based on these results, and consistent with SASSICAIA, aspirin with clopidogrel should remain the standard of care in this population.”
 

 

 

Troponin response may vary

A striking finding in ALPHEUS was the discrepancy between very high rates of periprocedural troponin elevation and very low rates of clinical events through 30 days of follow-up. “When you look at these modest elevations of troponin it appears that there is a lot of noise here,” said Dr. Wiviott, vice president for clinical trials research and administration at Massachusetts General Hospital and Brigham and Women’s Hospital and a cardiologist at Harvard Medical School, Boston.

Troponin elevations in stable coronary patients undergoing PCI may have a different underlying mechanism than elevated troponins in patients undergoing PCI for an acute coronary syndrome, he added. In stable CAD patients, the phenomenon may be more related to atherosclerosis than to platelet activation and thrombosis.

During a panel discussion, Sunil V. Rao, MD, said cardiologists are “probably going to have to go back to the drawing board and think about what kinds of events are really, really important.”

American Heart Association
Dr. Sunil V. Rao


“It’s incumbent on our profession to figure out whether periprocedural MI should continue to be a component of the composite endpoint in PCI trials, because it’s highly dependent on the definition that’s being used,” observed Dr. Rao, professor of medicine at Duke University, Durham, N.C.

Dr. Silvain reported receiving institutional research funding and consulting fees from AstraZeneca, which funded the ALPHEUS trial. He serves as a consultant to a handful of other pharmaceutical companies as well.

Simultaneously with Dr. Silvain’s presentation at AHA 2020, the ALPHEUS results were published online in The Lancet.

SOURCE: Silvain J. AHA 2020. Session LBS 3.

Ticagrelor failed to unseat clopidogrel as the guideline-recommended P2Y12 inhibitor of choice in patients undergoing elective percutaneous coronary intervention for stable CAD in the randomized ALPHEUS trial.

“The higher level of platelet inhibition obtained with ticagrelor does not translate into a reduction of periprocedural MI or myocardial injury within 48 hours of high-risk PCI performed in stable coronary patients,” reported Johanne Silvain, MD, PhD, professor of cardiology at the Sorbonne University and director of the ICU at Pitie-Salpetriere Hospital, Paris, at the virtual American Heart Association scientific sessions.

American Heart Association
Dr. Johanne Silvain


Ticagrelor did, however, result in a significantly higher rate of nuisance or minor bleeding than clopidogrel within 30 days post PCI, as well as more frequent dyspnea and treatment discontinuation.

ALPHEUS was an open-label, randomized trial including 1,883 patients undergoing elective PCI for stable coronary disease at 49 French or Czech PCI centers. All participants were either troponin-negative or had a modestly elevated but declining high-sensitivity troponin level. They possessed an average of 3.2 procedure-related or patient-related high-risk features, among the most common of which were multivessel disease, long lesions requiring multiple stents, and diabetes. Patients were randomized to a 300- or 600-mg loading dose of clopidogrel (Kengreal) or 180 mg of ticagrelor (Brilinta) prior to PCI. Afterwards they continued on 90 mg of ticagrelor twice daily or 75 mg of clopidogrel once daily for 30 days. Everyone was also on aspirin.
 

Myonecrosis hypothesis falls flat

The primary endpoint was the occurrence of major myocardial injury, defined as a periprocedural troponin elevated greater than 5 times the upper limit of normal within 48 hours of PCI; type 4a MI, defined as major myocardial injury plus signs or symptoms of ischemia; or stent thrombosis.

The rates were closely similar: 35.5% with ticagrelor, 36.2% with clopidogrel. The bulk of events consisted of major myocardial injury, with an incidence of 26.7% in the ticagrelor group and 27.7% with clopidogrel. Stent thrombosis occurred in 0.3% of patients in each group. Type 4a MI occurred in 8.5% of the ticagrelor group and 8.2% of patients on clopidogrel.

The study hypothesis was that a substantial portion of periprocedural myonecrosis may be thrombotic in nature, and that a stronger P2Y12 inhibitor could reduce the occurrence of these mini-infarcts and thus provide patient benefit. But the hypothesis was not borne out.

“We don’t know if these events are a risk factor or just a marker of risk,” Dr. Silvain said.

There were no between-group differences in major bleeding events at 48 hours or 30 days. However, the rate of nuisance or minor bleeding at 30 days was 11.2% in the ticagrelor arm, significantly higher than the 7.5% incidence with clopidogrel. Moreover, dyspnea occurred in 11.2% of patients on ticagrelor, compared to 0.2% with clopidogrel. Study drug discontinuation was more frequent in the ticagrelor arm: 2.2%, versus 0.4%.

Dr. Silvain also presented a pooled analysis of the 1,883 patients in ALPHEUS plus 781 from the similarly designed SASSICAIA trial, which compared prasugrel (Effient) to clopidogrel. Neither of the more potent P2Y12 inhibitors showed superiority over clopidogrel.

American Heart Association
Dr. Stephen D. Wiviott

Discussant Stephen D. Wiviott, MD, summed things up: “With no evidence for ischemic benefit and higher rates of low-severity bleeding, this trial does not support the use of more potent P2Y12 antagonists for elective PCI. Based on these results, and consistent with SASSICAIA, aspirin with clopidogrel should remain the standard of care in this population.”
 

 

 

Troponin response may vary

A striking finding in ALPHEUS was the discrepancy between very high rates of periprocedural troponin elevation and very low rates of clinical events through 30 days of follow-up. “When you look at these modest elevations of troponin it appears that there is a lot of noise here,” said Dr. Wiviott, vice president for clinical trials research and administration at Massachusetts General Hospital and Brigham and Women’s Hospital and a cardiologist at Harvard Medical School, Boston.

Troponin elevations in stable coronary patients undergoing PCI may have a different underlying mechanism than elevated troponins in patients undergoing PCI for an acute coronary syndrome, he added. In stable CAD patients, the phenomenon may be more related to atherosclerosis than to platelet activation and thrombosis.

During a panel discussion, Sunil V. Rao, MD, said cardiologists are “probably going to have to go back to the drawing board and think about what kinds of events are really, really important.”

American Heart Association
Dr. Sunil V. Rao


“It’s incumbent on our profession to figure out whether periprocedural MI should continue to be a component of the composite endpoint in PCI trials, because it’s highly dependent on the definition that’s being used,” observed Dr. Rao, professor of medicine at Duke University, Durham, N.C.

Dr. Silvain reported receiving institutional research funding and consulting fees from AstraZeneca, which funded the ALPHEUS trial. He serves as a consultant to a handful of other pharmaceutical companies as well.

Simultaneously with Dr. Silvain’s presentation at AHA 2020, the ALPHEUS results were published online in The Lancet.

SOURCE: Silvain J. AHA 2020. Session LBS 3.

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Intravenous iron reduces HF readmissions: AFFIRM-AHF

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Changed
Mon, 11/16/2020 - 16:14

Iron supplementation reduces heart failure (HF) readmissions in iron-deficient patients hospitalized for acute HF, according to results of the AFFIRM-AHF trial.

After 52 weeks, intravenous ferric carboxymaltose (Ferinject) reduced the risk of total HF hospitalizations and cardiovascular (CV) death by 21% compared with placebo (293 vs 372 events; rate ratio [RR] 0.79; 95% CI, 0.62 - 1.01).

Although the composite primary endpoint failed to achieve statistical significance, it was driven by a significant 26% reduction in the risk of total HF hospital readmissions (P = .013) without an effect on CV mortality (P =.809).

Because the management and follow-up of patients was affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, a prespecified sensitivity analysis was performed that censored patients in each country at the date when its first COVID-19 patient was reported, explained principal investigator Piotr Ponikowski, MD, PhD, Wroclaw Medical University, Wroclaw, Poland.

That analysis revealed a significant 30% reduction in total HF readmissions (P = .005) in patients receiving ferric carboxymaltose (FCM), as well as significant benefits on the primary composite and secondary endpoints.

Notably, 80% of patients required only one or two injections and HF hospitalizations were reduced irrespective of anemia status.

“Iron deficiency should be searched in patients hospitalized with acute heart failure — assessed using a simple blood test — and is now an important therapeutic target,” Ponikowski said at the virtual American Heart Association (AHA) Scientific Sessions 2020.

The results were also published simultaneously in The Lancet.

Iron deficiency is present in up to 70% of patients with acute HF and a predictor of poor outcome, independent of anemia and ejection fraction, he noted.

The FAIR-HF, CONFIRM-HF, and EFFECT-HF trials demonstrated that IV iron supplementation improves exercise capacity, symptoms, and quality of life in iron-deficient HF patients.

Dr. John McMurray


However, no such benefit was seen with oral IV in the IRONOUT trial. “So it seems if we are to replace iron, it needs to be done using intravenous therapy,” said John McMurray, MD, University of Glasgow, Scotland, who was invited to discuss the results.

He observed that the reduction in HF hospitalizations in AFFIRM-AHF were relatively modest and that the trial was never expected to show a benefit on CV mortality. Also, the COVID-19 sensitivity analysis providing more convincing effects is a valid approach and one recommended by regulators.

Further, the findings are supported by independent evidence in chronic kidney disease, from the PIVOTAL trial, that intravenous iron reduces HF hospitalizations, McMurray said.

“The million-dollar question, of course, is what will the results of this study mean for the guidelines: I think they probably will change the guidelines,” he said. “Certainly, I hope they will change the US guidelines, which have really given a very lukewarm recommendation for intravenous iron and I think that should probably be stronger.”

In a class IIb recommendation, the 2017 American College of Cardiology/AHA/Heart Failure Society of America heart failure guidelines say intravenous iron “might be reasonable” to improve functional status and quality of life in New York Heart Association class II and III patients with iron deficiency.

The 2016 European Society of Cardiology guidelines include a class IIa recommendation that IV iron “should be considered” in iron-deficient patients with symptomatic HF with reduced ejection fraction.

“This is the first large-scale [trial] of IV supplementation that could potentially change the way we approach patients, particularly those with hospitalized heart failure,” past AHA president Clyde Yancy, MD, MSc, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, said during an earlier press briefing.

Dr. Clyde W. Yancy


He pointed out that clinicians have been circumspect about the early IV iron data. “I have to congratulate you because you’ve changed the narrative,” Yancy said. “We have to start thinking about iron deficiency; we have to think about how we incorporate this in treatment protocols.”

Press briefing panelist Marc Pfeffer, MD, PhD, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, acknowledged he was among those circumspect.

“I’m no longer a skeptic and I want to congratulate them for showing it’s a risk factor,” he said. “It’s one thing to have a risk factor; it’s another to be a modifiable risk factor and I think that’s what’s so exciting about this.”

The double-blind, phase 4 AFFIRM-AHF trial randomly assigned 1132 patients to receive a bolus injection of ferric carboxymaltose or normal saline before hospital discharge for an acute HF episode. Subsequent treatment was given, as needed, up to 24 weeks post-randomization.

At admission, all patients had left ventricular ejection fractions less than 50% and iron deficiency (serum ferritin <100 ng/mL or serum ferritin 100-299 ng/mL if transferrin saturation <20%).

The modified intention-to-treat (mITT) analysis included 558 FCM patients and 550 controls in whom study treatment was started and for whom at least one post-randomization value was available.

Press briefing discussant Nancy Sweitzer, MD, PhD, director of the University of Arizona’s Sarver Heart Center in Tucson, said AFFIRM-AHF is an “important trial likely to change guidelines” and “targeted one of the highest risk populations we have in heart failure.”

Patients with iron deficiency tend to be elderly with more comorbidities, have longer hospital lengths of stay, and higher readmission rates. “So impacting hospitalizations in this population is incredibly impactful,” she said.

“Awareness and assessment of iron deficiency are an important part of inpatient care of patients with ejection fractions less than or equal to 50% and acute decompensated heart failure, and I think all of us in the community need to pay much more attention to this issue.”

As with any new therapy, there are implementation challenges such as how to monitor patients and deliver the therapy in a cost-effective way, Sweitzer said.

The trial focused on the most vulnerable period for HF patients, but these patients should be rechecked every 3 to 4 months for iron deficiency, Ponikowski observed during the briefing.

“This is a modifiable risk factor,” he said. “We only need to remember, we only need to assess it, and we have a very, very simple tool in our hands. We just need to measure two biomarkers, transferrin saturation and ferritin — that’s all.”

Unanswered questions include the mechanism behind the reduction in hospitalization, the relationship of benefit to hemoglobin levels, and whether there is a differential benefit based on age, presence of ischemia, or sex, especially as women tend to be more severely affected by iron deficiency, Sweitzer said.

During the formal presentation, Ponikowski said the primary endpoint was consistent in subgroup analyses across baseline hemoglobin, estimated glomerular filtration rate, and N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide levels, HF etiology, ejection fraction, and whether HF was diagnosed prior to the index hospitalization.

Treatment with FCM was safe, with no significant differences between the FCM and placebo groups in serious adverse events (45% vs 51%) or adverse events leading to study discontinuation (18% vs 17%), he reported. The most common adverse events were cardiac disorders (40.1% vs 44.3%) and infections (18.2% vs 22%).

AFFIRM-AHF is the first of three ongoing mortality and morbidity trials in heart failure with intravenous ferric carboxymaltose; the others are FAIR-HF2 and HEART-FID. Additional insights are also expected next year on intravenous iron isomaltoside from the Scottish-based IRONMAN trial in 1300 HF patients with iron deficiency.

The study was sponsored by Vifor International. Ponikowski has received research grants and personal fees from Vifor Pharma; and personal fees from Amgen, Bayer, Novartis, Abbott Vascular, Boehringer Ingelheim, Merck, Pfizer, Servier, AstraZeneca, Berlin Chemie, Cibiem, Renal Guard Solutions Bristol-Myers Squibb, and Impulse Dynamics.

Pfeffer reported honoraria from AstraZeneca, Corvidia, GlaxoSmithKline, Jazz, MyoKardia, Novartis, Roche, Sanofi, and Servier; other relationships with DalCor and Novo Nordisk; research grants from Novartis; and an ownership interest in DalCor. Sweitzer reported research payments from Merck and Novartis; and consulting fees from Myocardia.

McMurray reported relationships with Amgen, AstraZeneca, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Cytokinetics, Novartis, and Servier. Yancy reported a relationship with Abbott and JAMA Network.

Lancet. Published online November 13, 2020. Full text


American Heart Association Scientific Sessions 2020: Presented November 13, 2020.


A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

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Iron supplementation reduces heart failure (HF) readmissions in iron-deficient patients hospitalized for acute HF, according to results of the AFFIRM-AHF trial.

After 52 weeks, intravenous ferric carboxymaltose (Ferinject) reduced the risk of total HF hospitalizations and cardiovascular (CV) death by 21% compared with placebo (293 vs 372 events; rate ratio [RR] 0.79; 95% CI, 0.62 - 1.01).

Although the composite primary endpoint failed to achieve statistical significance, it was driven by a significant 26% reduction in the risk of total HF hospital readmissions (P = .013) without an effect on CV mortality (P =.809).

Because the management and follow-up of patients was affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, a prespecified sensitivity analysis was performed that censored patients in each country at the date when its first COVID-19 patient was reported, explained principal investigator Piotr Ponikowski, MD, PhD, Wroclaw Medical University, Wroclaw, Poland.

That analysis revealed a significant 30% reduction in total HF readmissions (P = .005) in patients receiving ferric carboxymaltose (FCM), as well as significant benefits on the primary composite and secondary endpoints.

Notably, 80% of patients required only one or two injections and HF hospitalizations were reduced irrespective of anemia status.

“Iron deficiency should be searched in patients hospitalized with acute heart failure — assessed using a simple blood test — and is now an important therapeutic target,” Ponikowski said at the virtual American Heart Association (AHA) Scientific Sessions 2020.

The results were also published simultaneously in The Lancet.

Iron deficiency is present in up to 70% of patients with acute HF and a predictor of poor outcome, independent of anemia and ejection fraction, he noted.

The FAIR-HF, CONFIRM-HF, and EFFECT-HF trials demonstrated that IV iron supplementation improves exercise capacity, symptoms, and quality of life in iron-deficient HF patients.

Dr. John McMurray


However, no such benefit was seen with oral IV in the IRONOUT trial. “So it seems if we are to replace iron, it needs to be done using intravenous therapy,” said John McMurray, MD, University of Glasgow, Scotland, who was invited to discuss the results.

He observed that the reduction in HF hospitalizations in AFFIRM-AHF were relatively modest and that the trial was never expected to show a benefit on CV mortality. Also, the COVID-19 sensitivity analysis providing more convincing effects is a valid approach and one recommended by regulators.

Further, the findings are supported by independent evidence in chronic kidney disease, from the PIVOTAL trial, that intravenous iron reduces HF hospitalizations, McMurray said.

“The million-dollar question, of course, is what will the results of this study mean for the guidelines: I think they probably will change the guidelines,” he said. “Certainly, I hope they will change the US guidelines, which have really given a very lukewarm recommendation for intravenous iron and I think that should probably be stronger.”

In a class IIb recommendation, the 2017 American College of Cardiology/AHA/Heart Failure Society of America heart failure guidelines say intravenous iron “might be reasonable” to improve functional status and quality of life in New York Heart Association class II and III patients with iron deficiency.

The 2016 European Society of Cardiology guidelines include a class IIa recommendation that IV iron “should be considered” in iron-deficient patients with symptomatic HF with reduced ejection fraction.

“This is the first large-scale [trial] of IV supplementation that could potentially change the way we approach patients, particularly those with hospitalized heart failure,” past AHA president Clyde Yancy, MD, MSc, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, said during an earlier press briefing.

Dr. Clyde W. Yancy


He pointed out that clinicians have been circumspect about the early IV iron data. “I have to congratulate you because you’ve changed the narrative,” Yancy said. “We have to start thinking about iron deficiency; we have to think about how we incorporate this in treatment protocols.”

Press briefing panelist Marc Pfeffer, MD, PhD, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, acknowledged he was among those circumspect.

“I’m no longer a skeptic and I want to congratulate them for showing it’s a risk factor,” he said. “It’s one thing to have a risk factor; it’s another to be a modifiable risk factor and I think that’s what’s so exciting about this.”

The double-blind, phase 4 AFFIRM-AHF trial randomly assigned 1132 patients to receive a bolus injection of ferric carboxymaltose or normal saline before hospital discharge for an acute HF episode. Subsequent treatment was given, as needed, up to 24 weeks post-randomization.

At admission, all patients had left ventricular ejection fractions less than 50% and iron deficiency (serum ferritin <100 ng/mL or serum ferritin 100-299 ng/mL if transferrin saturation <20%).

The modified intention-to-treat (mITT) analysis included 558 FCM patients and 550 controls in whom study treatment was started and for whom at least one post-randomization value was available.

Press briefing discussant Nancy Sweitzer, MD, PhD, director of the University of Arizona’s Sarver Heart Center in Tucson, said AFFIRM-AHF is an “important trial likely to change guidelines” and “targeted one of the highest risk populations we have in heart failure.”

Patients with iron deficiency tend to be elderly with more comorbidities, have longer hospital lengths of stay, and higher readmission rates. “So impacting hospitalizations in this population is incredibly impactful,” she said.

“Awareness and assessment of iron deficiency are an important part of inpatient care of patients with ejection fractions less than or equal to 50% and acute decompensated heart failure, and I think all of us in the community need to pay much more attention to this issue.”

As with any new therapy, there are implementation challenges such as how to monitor patients and deliver the therapy in a cost-effective way, Sweitzer said.

The trial focused on the most vulnerable period for HF patients, but these patients should be rechecked every 3 to 4 months for iron deficiency, Ponikowski observed during the briefing.

“This is a modifiable risk factor,” he said. “We only need to remember, we only need to assess it, and we have a very, very simple tool in our hands. We just need to measure two biomarkers, transferrin saturation and ferritin — that’s all.”

Unanswered questions include the mechanism behind the reduction in hospitalization, the relationship of benefit to hemoglobin levels, and whether there is a differential benefit based on age, presence of ischemia, or sex, especially as women tend to be more severely affected by iron deficiency, Sweitzer said.

During the formal presentation, Ponikowski said the primary endpoint was consistent in subgroup analyses across baseline hemoglobin, estimated glomerular filtration rate, and N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide levels, HF etiology, ejection fraction, and whether HF was diagnosed prior to the index hospitalization.

Treatment with FCM was safe, with no significant differences between the FCM and placebo groups in serious adverse events (45% vs 51%) or adverse events leading to study discontinuation (18% vs 17%), he reported. The most common adverse events were cardiac disorders (40.1% vs 44.3%) and infections (18.2% vs 22%).

AFFIRM-AHF is the first of three ongoing mortality and morbidity trials in heart failure with intravenous ferric carboxymaltose; the others are FAIR-HF2 and HEART-FID. Additional insights are also expected next year on intravenous iron isomaltoside from the Scottish-based IRONMAN trial in 1300 HF patients with iron deficiency.

The study was sponsored by Vifor International. Ponikowski has received research grants and personal fees from Vifor Pharma; and personal fees from Amgen, Bayer, Novartis, Abbott Vascular, Boehringer Ingelheim, Merck, Pfizer, Servier, AstraZeneca, Berlin Chemie, Cibiem, Renal Guard Solutions Bristol-Myers Squibb, and Impulse Dynamics.

Pfeffer reported honoraria from AstraZeneca, Corvidia, GlaxoSmithKline, Jazz, MyoKardia, Novartis, Roche, Sanofi, and Servier; other relationships with DalCor and Novo Nordisk; research grants from Novartis; and an ownership interest in DalCor. Sweitzer reported research payments from Merck and Novartis; and consulting fees from Myocardia.

McMurray reported relationships with Amgen, AstraZeneca, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Cytokinetics, Novartis, and Servier. Yancy reported a relationship with Abbott and JAMA Network.

Lancet. Published online November 13, 2020. Full text


American Heart Association Scientific Sessions 2020: Presented November 13, 2020.


A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

Iron supplementation reduces heart failure (HF) readmissions in iron-deficient patients hospitalized for acute HF, according to results of the AFFIRM-AHF trial.

After 52 weeks, intravenous ferric carboxymaltose (Ferinject) reduced the risk of total HF hospitalizations and cardiovascular (CV) death by 21% compared with placebo (293 vs 372 events; rate ratio [RR] 0.79; 95% CI, 0.62 - 1.01).

Although the composite primary endpoint failed to achieve statistical significance, it was driven by a significant 26% reduction in the risk of total HF hospital readmissions (P = .013) without an effect on CV mortality (P =.809).

Because the management and follow-up of patients was affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, a prespecified sensitivity analysis was performed that censored patients in each country at the date when its first COVID-19 patient was reported, explained principal investigator Piotr Ponikowski, MD, PhD, Wroclaw Medical University, Wroclaw, Poland.

That analysis revealed a significant 30% reduction in total HF readmissions (P = .005) in patients receiving ferric carboxymaltose (FCM), as well as significant benefits on the primary composite and secondary endpoints.

Notably, 80% of patients required only one or two injections and HF hospitalizations were reduced irrespective of anemia status.

“Iron deficiency should be searched in patients hospitalized with acute heart failure — assessed using a simple blood test — and is now an important therapeutic target,” Ponikowski said at the virtual American Heart Association (AHA) Scientific Sessions 2020.

The results were also published simultaneously in The Lancet.

Iron deficiency is present in up to 70% of patients with acute HF and a predictor of poor outcome, independent of anemia and ejection fraction, he noted.

The FAIR-HF, CONFIRM-HF, and EFFECT-HF trials demonstrated that IV iron supplementation improves exercise capacity, symptoms, and quality of life in iron-deficient HF patients.

Dr. John McMurray


However, no such benefit was seen with oral IV in the IRONOUT trial. “So it seems if we are to replace iron, it needs to be done using intravenous therapy,” said John McMurray, MD, University of Glasgow, Scotland, who was invited to discuss the results.

He observed that the reduction in HF hospitalizations in AFFIRM-AHF were relatively modest and that the trial was never expected to show a benefit on CV mortality. Also, the COVID-19 sensitivity analysis providing more convincing effects is a valid approach and one recommended by regulators.

Further, the findings are supported by independent evidence in chronic kidney disease, from the PIVOTAL trial, that intravenous iron reduces HF hospitalizations, McMurray said.

“The million-dollar question, of course, is what will the results of this study mean for the guidelines: I think they probably will change the guidelines,” he said. “Certainly, I hope they will change the US guidelines, which have really given a very lukewarm recommendation for intravenous iron and I think that should probably be stronger.”

In a class IIb recommendation, the 2017 American College of Cardiology/AHA/Heart Failure Society of America heart failure guidelines say intravenous iron “might be reasonable” to improve functional status and quality of life in New York Heart Association class II and III patients with iron deficiency.

The 2016 European Society of Cardiology guidelines include a class IIa recommendation that IV iron “should be considered” in iron-deficient patients with symptomatic HF with reduced ejection fraction.

“This is the first large-scale [trial] of IV supplementation that could potentially change the way we approach patients, particularly those with hospitalized heart failure,” past AHA president Clyde Yancy, MD, MSc, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, said during an earlier press briefing.

Dr. Clyde W. Yancy


He pointed out that clinicians have been circumspect about the early IV iron data. “I have to congratulate you because you’ve changed the narrative,” Yancy said. “We have to start thinking about iron deficiency; we have to think about how we incorporate this in treatment protocols.”

Press briefing panelist Marc Pfeffer, MD, PhD, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, acknowledged he was among those circumspect.

“I’m no longer a skeptic and I want to congratulate them for showing it’s a risk factor,” he said. “It’s one thing to have a risk factor; it’s another to be a modifiable risk factor and I think that’s what’s so exciting about this.”

The double-blind, phase 4 AFFIRM-AHF trial randomly assigned 1132 patients to receive a bolus injection of ferric carboxymaltose or normal saline before hospital discharge for an acute HF episode. Subsequent treatment was given, as needed, up to 24 weeks post-randomization.

At admission, all patients had left ventricular ejection fractions less than 50% and iron deficiency (serum ferritin <100 ng/mL or serum ferritin 100-299 ng/mL if transferrin saturation <20%).

The modified intention-to-treat (mITT) analysis included 558 FCM patients and 550 controls in whom study treatment was started and for whom at least one post-randomization value was available.

Press briefing discussant Nancy Sweitzer, MD, PhD, director of the University of Arizona’s Sarver Heart Center in Tucson, said AFFIRM-AHF is an “important trial likely to change guidelines” and “targeted one of the highest risk populations we have in heart failure.”

Patients with iron deficiency tend to be elderly with more comorbidities, have longer hospital lengths of stay, and higher readmission rates. “So impacting hospitalizations in this population is incredibly impactful,” she said.

“Awareness and assessment of iron deficiency are an important part of inpatient care of patients with ejection fractions less than or equal to 50% and acute decompensated heart failure, and I think all of us in the community need to pay much more attention to this issue.”

As with any new therapy, there are implementation challenges such as how to monitor patients and deliver the therapy in a cost-effective way, Sweitzer said.

The trial focused on the most vulnerable period for HF patients, but these patients should be rechecked every 3 to 4 months for iron deficiency, Ponikowski observed during the briefing.

“This is a modifiable risk factor,” he said. “We only need to remember, we only need to assess it, and we have a very, very simple tool in our hands. We just need to measure two biomarkers, transferrin saturation and ferritin — that’s all.”

Unanswered questions include the mechanism behind the reduction in hospitalization, the relationship of benefit to hemoglobin levels, and whether there is a differential benefit based on age, presence of ischemia, or sex, especially as women tend to be more severely affected by iron deficiency, Sweitzer said.

During the formal presentation, Ponikowski said the primary endpoint was consistent in subgroup analyses across baseline hemoglobin, estimated glomerular filtration rate, and N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide levels, HF etiology, ejection fraction, and whether HF was diagnosed prior to the index hospitalization.

Treatment with FCM was safe, with no significant differences between the FCM and placebo groups in serious adverse events (45% vs 51%) or adverse events leading to study discontinuation (18% vs 17%), he reported. The most common adverse events were cardiac disorders (40.1% vs 44.3%) and infections (18.2% vs 22%).

AFFIRM-AHF is the first of three ongoing mortality and morbidity trials in heart failure with intravenous ferric carboxymaltose; the others are FAIR-HF2 and HEART-FID. Additional insights are also expected next year on intravenous iron isomaltoside from the Scottish-based IRONMAN trial in 1300 HF patients with iron deficiency.

The study was sponsored by Vifor International. Ponikowski has received research grants and personal fees from Vifor Pharma; and personal fees from Amgen, Bayer, Novartis, Abbott Vascular, Boehringer Ingelheim, Merck, Pfizer, Servier, AstraZeneca, Berlin Chemie, Cibiem, Renal Guard Solutions Bristol-Myers Squibb, and Impulse Dynamics.

Pfeffer reported honoraria from AstraZeneca, Corvidia, GlaxoSmithKline, Jazz, MyoKardia, Novartis, Roche, Sanofi, and Servier; other relationships with DalCor and Novo Nordisk; research grants from Novartis; and an ownership interest in DalCor. Sweitzer reported research payments from Merck and Novartis; and consulting fees from Myocardia.

McMurray reported relationships with Amgen, AstraZeneca, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Cytokinetics, Novartis, and Servier. Yancy reported a relationship with Abbott and JAMA Network.

Lancet. Published online November 13, 2020. Full text


American Heart Association Scientific Sessions 2020: Presented November 13, 2020.


A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

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GALACTIC-HF: New ‘myotropic’ drug class shows modest HFrEF benefit

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Mon, 11/16/2020 - 15:06

Omecamtiv mecarbil, a member of the novel myotropic drug class that improves cardiac performance, safely produced a significant but modest improvement in heart failure events or cardiovascular death in a pivotal trial with HFrEF patients, leaving experts unsure about the role this drug could have on top of an already crowded list of four first-line drug classes for this condition.

“It remains to be investigated and discussed where omecamtiv mecarbil fits in” the overall approach to treating patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), commented Paul Heidenreich, MD, designated discussant for the report at the virtual scientific sessions of the American Heart Association.

Dr. John R. Teerlink


Omecamtiv mecarbil (OM) treatment produced a positive result for the study’s primary endpoint, with a 2.1% absolute cut in the combined rate of cardiovascular death, first heart failure hospitalization, or first urgent visit for heart failure compared with placebo during a median follow-up of about 22 months This represented an 8% relative risk reduction, reported John R. Teerlink, MD, at the meeting, and broke down as a 0.6% absolute drop in cardiovascular death compared with the placebo arm, a 0.7% cut in heart failure hospitalization, and a 0.8% drop in urgent outpatient visits for heart failure. Dr. Teerlink and his associates called this benefit “modest” in their simultaneous publication in the New England Journal of Medicine.



Room for a fifth HFrEF drug?

In addition to the limited benefit, another question raised by the trial is how OM would perform when used on top of what is now considered standard, quadruple therapy for most HFrEF patients: a beta-blocker, a mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist, sacubitril-valsartan (Entresto), and an agent from the sodium glucose co-transporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitor class, specifically dapagliflozin (Farxiga) or empagliflozin (Jardiance). During the period when the new OM trial was run, 2017-2019, the SGLT2 inhibitors had not yet been established as a key part of standard HFrEF treatment, and hence fewer than 3% of enrolled patients were on one of these drugs.

Because of this evidence gap, OM “can’t be across the board a fifth drug on top of standard treatment,” based on the new results, cautioned Dr. Heidenreich, a cardiologist and professor of medicine at Stanford (Calif.) University School of Medicine.

Dr. Douglas Mann


The new evidence for OM’s efficacy is “not compelling” when compared with what dapagliflozin and empagliflozin each showed in recent trials, with the SGLT2 inhibitors producing about a 25% cut compared with placebo in a primary outcome that was similar to the one used in the OM trial, commented Douglas L. Mann, MD, a heart failure physician and professor of medicine at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. “Would OM still show a benefit with an SGLT2 inhibitor? That’s not known” on the basis of the available data, he said in an interview.

A related factor that could influence potential use of OM in routine practice is that with four established, foundational drug classes, adding a fifth drug that will only be available in a branded formulation raises issues of incremental cost and compliance issues, Dr. Mann noted.


The positives of omecamtiv mercarbil

But in addition to its positive result in the GALACTIC-HF trial, treatment with OM showed other attractive characteristics in a study that treated a wide spectrum of 4,120 patients with HFrEF as well as including 4,112 patients randomized to placebo. Most notably, OM had a very clean safety profile, with adverse event rates similar to placebo patients across all adverse event subtypes, as well as causing no drop in blood pressure and actually an average 2.0–mm Hg increase in systolic blood pressure, no increase in potassium, no apparent impact on renal function, and a small but significant decline in N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) compared with placebo.

This coupled with the novel mechanism of action of OM – direct augmentation of cardiac sarcomere function by increasing myosin attachment to actin – suggests that OM can be safely added on top of existing HFrEF treatment to provide an unique and incremental benefit.

“Other heart failure drugs [like beta-blockers and sacubitril-valsartan] lower blood pressure, so what can happen is that clinicians run out of room to add full dosages” when patients’ pressures fall too low, commented Gregory D. Lewis, MD, head of Heart Failure at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. He is principle investigator for another OM trial, METEORIC-HF, which is examining the possible impact of the drug on exercise capacity in a randomized study with about 270 HFrEF patients.

If the METEORIC-HF results can could confirm some of the GALACTIC-HF results that suggested improvements in patient function, the combined data could potentially lead to regulatory approval for U.S. marketing of the drug, Dr. Lewis suggested. Results from that study are expected in 2021, he said in an interview.



The GALACTIC-HF results hinted at possible functional improvement after 24 weeks on treatment among patients who required hospitalization as measured by the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire, which measures quality life. However, this difference failed to meet the study’s prespecified definition of a significant effect.

Another intriguing suggestion of focused benefit was in patients with a left ventricular ejection fraction at or below the median in GALACTIC-HF of 28%. In that subgroup, OM treatment was linked with a significant 16% relative reduction in the primary endpoint compared with placebo, while it had no significant effect in the other 50% of patients with higher ejection fractions. (The maximum left ventricular ejection fraction for enrollment was 35%.) This apparent subgroup interaction was statistically significant, reported Dr. Teerlink, a professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, and director of Heart Failure at the San Francisco V.A. Medical Center.

Further analysis of the study data “will provide greater insight into subgroups who may demonstrate greater benefit, such as patients with lower ejection fraction in whom improving cardiac function may have a greater role,” he said. The idea that a drug that improves myocyte function at the molecular level could especially benefit patients with the lowest ejection fractions is “biologically plausible,” Dr. Teerlink said.

This scenario looks reasonable, and could make OM something of a niche drug for at least the near term, said Dr. Mann.


The world’s first myotropic drug

Possibly the most notable aspect of GALACTIC-HF is that it proved the efficacy, modest though it was, of a novel drug mechanism that fulfills a decades-long quest of heart failure researchers: a safe way to improve the heart’s pumping action.

“For years, the heart failure community struggled with treatment to improve cardiac performance, but invariably it ended in disaster by worsening cardiac deaths,” problems that led to abandonment of early inotropic drugs more than a generation ago, noted Dr. Mann.

But a more nuanced approach to inotropic agents recently has emerged from Dr. Teerlink and his associates, built on the premise that the dangers seen years ago related to the calcium modulations they caused. Their new paradigm is that the dangers of these “calcitropic” agents can be sidestepped with different agents that either mediate their effects via myosin, the myotropes like OM, or mitochondrial effects from mitotropic drugs.

The inotrope debacle from the 1990s made that drug-class name “a dirty word that causes fear and loathing in the heart failure community,” observed Dr. Mann. While the term myotrope has not yet really caught on, “If omecamtiv mecarbil starts getting used in routine practice, then I think you’ll start seeing uptake of the term myotrope,” he predicted.

GALACTIC-HF was sponsored by Amgen, Cytokinetics, and Servier, the companies developing omecamtiv mecarbil. Dr. Teerlink has received research support from and been a consultant to Amgen, Cytokinetics, and Servier, as well as Abbott, AstraZeneca, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Medtronic, Merck, and Novartis. Dr. Heidenreich had no disclosures. Dr. Mann is on a steering committee for a trial sponsored by Novartis and has no other commercial disclosures. Dr. Lewis is principal investigator for a trial of omecamtiv mecarbil and has no other commercial disclosures.

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Omecamtiv mecarbil, a member of the novel myotropic drug class that improves cardiac performance, safely produced a significant but modest improvement in heart failure events or cardiovascular death in a pivotal trial with HFrEF patients, leaving experts unsure about the role this drug could have on top of an already crowded list of four first-line drug classes for this condition.

“It remains to be investigated and discussed where omecamtiv mecarbil fits in” the overall approach to treating patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), commented Paul Heidenreich, MD, designated discussant for the report at the virtual scientific sessions of the American Heart Association.

Dr. John R. Teerlink


Omecamtiv mecarbil (OM) treatment produced a positive result for the study’s primary endpoint, with a 2.1% absolute cut in the combined rate of cardiovascular death, first heart failure hospitalization, or first urgent visit for heart failure compared with placebo during a median follow-up of about 22 months This represented an 8% relative risk reduction, reported John R. Teerlink, MD, at the meeting, and broke down as a 0.6% absolute drop in cardiovascular death compared with the placebo arm, a 0.7% cut in heart failure hospitalization, and a 0.8% drop in urgent outpatient visits for heart failure. Dr. Teerlink and his associates called this benefit “modest” in their simultaneous publication in the New England Journal of Medicine.



Room for a fifth HFrEF drug?

In addition to the limited benefit, another question raised by the trial is how OM would perform when used on top of what is now considered standard, quadruple therapy for most HFrEF patients: a beta-blocker, a mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist, sacubitril-valsartan (Entresto), and an agent from the sodium glucose co-transporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitor class, specifically dapagliflozin (Farxiga) or empagliflozin (Jardiance). During the period when the new OM trial was run, 2017-2019, the SGLT2 inhibitors had not yet been established as a key part of standard HFrEF treatment, and hence fewer than 3% of enrolled patients were on one of these drugs.

Because of this evidence gap, OM “can’t be across the board a fifth drug on top of standard treatment,” based on the new results, cautioned Dr. Heidenreich, a cardiologist and professor of medicine at Stanford (Calif.) University School of Medicine.

Dr. Douglas Mann


The new evidence for OM’s efficacy is “not compelling” when compared with what dapagliflozin and empagliflozin each showed in recent trials, with the SGLT2 inhibitors producing about a 25% cut compared with placebo in a primary outcome that was similar to the one used in the OM trial, commented Douglas L. Mann, MD, a heart failure physician and professor of medicine at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. “Would OM still show a benefit with an SGLT2 inhibitor? That’s not known” on the basis of the available data, he said in an interview.

A related factor that could influence potential use of OM in routine practice is that with four established, foundational drug classes, adding a fifth drug that will only be available in a branded formulation raises issues of incremental cost and compliance issues, Dr. Mann noted.


The positives of omecamtiv mercarbil

But in addition to its positive result in the GALACTIC-HF trial, treatment with OM showed other attractive characteristics in a study that treated a wide spectrum of 4,120 patients with HFrEF as well as including 4,112 patients randomized to placebo. Most notably, OM had a very clean safety profile, with adverse event rates similar to placebo patients across all adverse event subtypes, as well as causing no drop in blood pressure and actually an average 2.0–mm Hg increase in systolic blood pressure, no increase in potassium, no apparent impact on renal function, and a small but significant decline in N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) compared with placebo.

This coupled with the novel mechanism of action of OM – direct augmentation of cardiac sarcomere function by increasing myosin attachment to actin – suggests that OM can be safely added on top of existing HFrEF treatment to provide an unique and incremental benefit.

“Other heart failure drugs [like beta-blockers and sacubitril-valsartan] lower blood pressure, so what can happen is that clinicians run out of room to add full dosages” when patients’ pressures fall too low, commented Gregory D. Lewis, MD, head of Heart Failure at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. He is principle investigator for another OM trial, METEORIC-HF, which is examining the possible impact of the drug on exercise capacity in a randomized study with about 270 HFrEF patients.

If the METEORIC-HF results can could confirm some of the GALACTIC-HF results that suggested improvements in patient function, the combined data could potentially lead to regulatory approval for U.S. marketing of the drug, Dr. Lewis suggested. Results from that study are expected in 2021, he said in an interview.



The GALACTIC-HF results hinted at possible functional improvement after 24 weeks on treatment among patients who required hospitalization as measured by the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire, which measures quality life. However, this difference failed to meet the study’s prespecified definition of a significant effect.

Another intriguing suggestion of focused benefit was in patients with a left ventricular ejection fraction at or below the median in GALACTIC-HF of 28%. In that subgroup, OM treatment was linked with a significant 16% relative reduction in the primary endpoint compared with placebo, while it had no significant effect in the other 50% of patients with higher ejection fractions. (The maximum left ventricular ejection fraction for enrollment was 35%.) This apparent subgroup interaction was statistically significant, reported Dr. Teerlink, a professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, and director of Heart Failure at the San Francisco V.A. Medical Center.

Further analysis of the study data “will provide greater insight into subgroups who may demonstrate greater benefit, such as patients with lower ejection fraction in whom improving cardiac function may have a greater role,” he said. The idea that a drug that improves myocyte function at the molecular level could especially benefit patients with the lowest ejection fractions is “biologically plausible,” Dr. Teerlink said.

This scenario looks reasonable, and could make OM something of a niche drug for at least the near term, said Dr. Mann.


The world’s first myotropic drug

Possibly the most notable aspect of GALACTIC-HF is that it proved the efficacy, modest though it was, of a novel drug mechanism that fulfills a decades-long quest of heart failure researchers: a safe way to improve the heart’s pumping action.

“For years, the heart failure community struggled with treatment to improve cardiac performance, but invariably it ended in disaster by worsening cardiac deaths,” problems that led to abandonment of early inotropic drugs more than a generation ago, noted Dr. Mann.

But a more nuanced approach to inotropic agents recently has emerged from Dr. Teerlink and his associates, built on the premise that the dangers seen years ago related to the calcium modulations they caused. Their new paradigm is that the dangers of these “calcitropic” agents can be sidestepped with different agents that either mediate their effects via myosin, the myotropes like OM, or mitochondrial effects from mitotropic drugs.

The inotrope debacle from the 1990s made that drug-class name “a dirty word that causes fear and loathing in the heart failure community,” observed Dr. Mann. While the term myotrope has not yet really caught on, “If omecamtiv mecarbil starts getting used in routine practice, then I think you’ll start seeing uptake of the term myotrope,” he predicted.

GALACTIC-HF was sponsored by Amgen, Cytokinetics, and Servier, the companies developing omecamtiv mecarbil. Dr. Teerlink has received research support from and been a consultant to Amgen, Cytokinetics, and Servier, as well as Abbott, AstraZeneca, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Medtronic, Merck, and Novartis. Dr. Heidenreich had no disclosures. Dr. Mann is on a steering committee for a trial sponsored by Novartis and has no other commercial disclosures. Dr. Lewis is principal investigator for a trial of omecamtiv mecarbil and has no other commercial disclosures.

Omecamtiv mecarbil, a member of the novel myotropic drug class that improves cardiac performance, safely produced a significant but modest improvement in heart failure events or cardiovascular death in a pivotal trial with HFrEF patients, leaving experts unsure about the role this drug could have on top of an already crowded list of four first-line drug classes for this condition.

“It remains to be investigated and discussed where omecamtiv mecarbil fits in” the overall approach to treating patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), commented Paul Heidenreich, MD, designated discussant for the report at the virtual scientific sessions of the American Heart Association.

Dr. John R. Teerlink


Omecamtiv mecarbil (OM) treatment produced a positive result for the study’s primary endpoint, with a 2.1% absolute cut in the combined rate of cardiovascular death, first heart failure hospitalization, or first urgent visit for heart failure compared with placebo during a median follow-up of about 22 months This represented an 8% relative risk reduction, reported John R. Teerlink, MD, at the meeting, and broke down as a 0.6% absolute drop in cardiovascular death compared with the placebo arm, a 0.7% cut in heart failure hospitalization, and a 0.8% drop in urgent outpatient visits for heart failure. Dr. Teerlink and his associates called this benefit “modest” in their simultaneous publication in the New England Journal of Medicine.



Room for a fifth HFrEF drug?

In addition to the limited benefit, another question raised by the trial is how OM would perform when used on top of what is now considered standard, quadruple therapy for most HFrEF patients: a beta-blocker, a mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist, sacubitril-valsartan (Entresto), and an agent from the sodium glucose co-transporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitor class, specifically dapagliflozin (Farxiga) or empagliflozin (Jardiance). During the period when the new OM trial was run, 2017-2019, the SGLT2 inhibitors had not yet been established as a key part of standard HFrEF treatment, and hence fewer than 3% of enrolled patients were on one of these drugs.

Because of this evidence gap, OM “can’t be across the board a fifth drug on top of standard treatment,” based on the new results, cautioned Dr. Heidenreich, a cardiologist and professor of medicine at Stanford (Calif.) University School of Medicine.

Dr. Douglas Mann


The new evidence for OM’s efficacy is “not compelling” when compared with what dapagliflozin and empagliflozin each showed in recent trials, with the SGLT2 inhibitors producing about a 25% cut compared with placebo in a primary outcome that was similar to the one used in the OM trial, commented Douglas L. Mann, MD, a heart failure physician and professor of medicine at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. “Would OM still show a benefit with an SGLT2 inhibitor? That’s not known” on the basis of the available data, he said in an interview.

A related factor that could influence potential use of OM in routine practice is that with four established, foundational drug classes, adding a fifth drug that will only be available in a branded formulation raises issues of incremental cost and compliance issues, Dr. Mann noted.


The positives of omecamtiv mercarbil

But in addition to its positive result in the GALACTIC-HF trial, treatment with OM showed other attractive characteristics in a study that treated a wide spectrum of 4,120 patients with HFrEF as well as including 4,112 patients randomized to placebo. Most notably, OM had a very clean safety profile, with adverse event rates similar to placebo patients across all adverse event subtypes, as well as causing no drop in blood pressure and actually an average 2.0–mm Hg increase in systolic blood pressure, no increase in potassium, no apparent impact on renal function, and a small but significant decline in N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) compared with placebo.

This coupled with the novel mechanism of action of OM – direct augmentation of cardiac sarcomere function by increasing myosin attachment to actin – suggests that OM can be safely added on top of existing HFrEF treatment to provide an unique and incremental benefit.

“Other heart failure drugs [like beta-blockers and sacubitril-valsartan] lower blood pressure, so what can happen is that clinicians run out of room to add full dosages” when patients’ pressures fall too low, commented Gregory D. Lewis, MD, head of Heart Failure at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. He is principle investigator for another OM trial, METEORIC-HF, which is examining the possible impact of the drug on exercise capacity in a randomized study with about 270 HFrEF patients.

If the METEORIC-HF results can could confirm some of the GALACTIC-HF results that suggested improvements in patient function, the combined data could potentially lead to regulatory approval for U.S. marketing of the drug, Dr. Lewis suggested. Results from that study are expected in 2021, he said in an interview.



The GALACTIC-HF results hinted at possible functional improvement after 24 weeks on treatment among patients who required hospitalization as measured by the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire, which measures quality life. However, this difference failed to meet the study’s prespecified definition of a significant effect.

Another intriguing suggestion of focused benefit was in patients with a left ventricular ejection fraction at or below the median in GALACTIC-HF of 28%. In that subgroup, OM treatment was linked with a significant 16% relative reduction in the primary endpoint compared with placebo, while it had no significant effect in the other 50% of patients with higher ejection fractions. (The maximum left ventricular ejection fraction for enrollment was 35%.) This apparent subgroup interaction was statistically significant, reported Dr. Teerlink, a professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, and director of Heart Failure at the San Francisco V.A. Medical Center.

Further analysis of the study data “will provide greater insight into subgroups who may demonstrate greater benefit, such as patients with lower ejection fraction in whom improving cardiac function may have a greater role,” he said. The idea that a drug that improves myocyte function at the molecular level could especially benefit patients with the lowest ejection fractions is “biologically plausible,” Dr. Teerlink said.

This scenario looks reasonable, and could make OM something of a niche drug for at least the near term, said Dr. Mann.


The world’s first myotropic drug

Possibly the most notable aspect of GALACTIC-HF is that it proved the efficacy, modest though it was, of a novel drug mechanism that fulfills a decades-long quest of heart failure researchers: a safe way to improve the heart’s pumping action.

“For years, the heart failure community struggled with treatment to improve cardiac performance, but invariably it ended in disaster by worsening cardiac deaths,” problems that led to abandonment of early inotropic drugs more than a generation ago, noted Dr. Mann.

But a more nuanced approach to inotropic agents recently has emerged from Dr. Teerlink and his associates, built on the premise that the dangers seen years ago related to the calcium modulations they caused. Their new paradigm is that the dangers of these “calcitropic” agents can be sidestepped with different agents that either mediate their effects via myosin, the myotropes like OM, or mitochondrial effects from mitotropic drugs.

The inotrope debacle from the 1990s made that drug-class name “a dirty word that causes fear and loathing in the heart failure community,” observed Dr. Mann. While the term myotrope has not yet really caught on, “If omecamtiv mecarbil starts getting used in routine practice, then I think you’ll start seeing uptake of the term myotrope,” he predicted.

GALACTIC-HF was sponsored by Amgen, Cytokinetics, and Servier, the companies developing omecamtiv mecarbil. Dr. Teerlink has received research support from and been a consultant to Amgen, Cytokinetics, and Servier, as well as Abbott, AstraZeneca, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Medtronic, Merck, and Novartis. Dr. Heidenreich had no disclosures. Dr. Mann is on a steering committee for a trial sponsored by Novartis and has no other commercial disclosures. Dr. Lewis is principal investigator for a trial of omecamtiv mecarbil and has no other commercial disclosures.

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Don’t miss cardiovascular risk factors in transgender patients

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Tue, 05/03/2022 - 15:07

Cardiovascular disease risk is elevated among transgender individuals seeking gender-affirming hormone therapy, according to a retrospective study in 427 patients.

nktwentythree/Getty Images

The transgender population often experiences socioeconomic and health disparities, including reduced access to care, Kara J. Denby, MD, said in an interview.

Previous research suggests that the use of gender-affirming hormone therapy (GAHT) may place transgender persons at increased cardiovascular risk, she said.

To identify the potential risk for transgender individuals, the researchers identified baseline cardiovascular risk in patients who had not yet undergone GAHT. Study participants were enrolled in a multidisciplinary transgender program, and the researchers collected data on demographics, medical history, vitals, medications, and laboratory results. The average age of the participants was 26 years, 172 identified as men, 236 as women, and 20 as nonbinary.

Overall, 55% of the participants had a chronic medical condition at baseline. Of these, 74 patients had hypertension, 41 had hyperlipidemia, 2 had a history of stroke, 7 had coronary artery disease, and 4 had chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

For all patients who did not have documented atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, their American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association ASCVD and QRISK3 risk scores were calculated. “The incidence of undiagnosed hypertension and hyperlipidemia was 6.8% and 11.3% respectively, and of these cases, only 64% and 24% were on appropriate therapies,” noted Dr. Denby of the Cleveland (Ohio) Clinic.

She reported the results Nov. 13 in a presentation at the at the virtual American Heart Association scientific sessions.

The findings were limited by the observational nature of the study.

However, the results suggest that transgender patients “appear to be at higher risk than their age-matched historical cohorts regardless of gender,” said Dr. Denby. More research is needed, but cardiovascular disease–prevention efforts may be inadequate in the transgender population given the elevated risk observed in this study, she concluded.
 

Growing transgender population is medically underserved

The transgender population is growing in the United States and internationally, said Dr. Denby. “This group has a history of being marginalized as a result of their transgender status with socioeconomic and health repercussions,” she said. “It is well known that transgender patients are less likely to have access to health care or utilize health care for a variety of reasons, including stigma and fear of mistreatment. This often leads transgender individuals to present to care late in disease processes which makes their disease harder to treat and often leads to emergent medical conditions,” she added.

“Transgender men and women are at high risk for cardiovascular disease and often aren’t screened at recommended intervals because of decreased health care use compared to their cisgender counterparts,” she said. “This may lead to untreated diseases that make them even more likely to suffer poor health outcomes.”

The current study is important because there are “almost no prior data regarding the cardiovascular health status of this population prior to gender-affirming care,” Dr. Denby emphasized. “There are data that gay, lesbian, and bisexual individuals are at higher risk for poor cardiovascular outcomes, but the same data are lacking in the transgender group,” she said.

“As transgender individuals have frequent physician visits while on hormonal therapy, this seems like the opportune time to screen for cardiovascular risk factors and treat previously undiagnosed diseases that can lead to poor health outcomes in the future,” Dr. Denby explained. “If we are able to intervene at an earlier age, perhaps we can help prevent poor health outcomes down the road,” she said.
 

 

 

Additional research can inform practice

Dr. Denby said she was not surprised by the findings. “This is a very high-risk population that often doesn’t follow closely in the health care system,” she said. “These data are very important in thinking holistically about transgender patients.” Clinicians can “use the opportunities we have when they present for gender-affirming care to optimize their overall health status, promote long-term health, and reduce the risks associated with hormonal therapy and gender-affirming surgeries,” she noted. “We hope to use this information to change our practice at the Cleveland Clinic and nationally as well. Transgender patients should be screened and aggressively treated for cardiovascular disease and risk factors,” she said.

Key barriers to overcome include determining the best way to reach out to transgender individuals and then making them feel comfortable in the clinical setting, Dr. Denby said. “This means that we must set up clinics that are approachable and safe for all comers. The lack of laws in many states that protect this vulnerable population also contributes to lack of access to care,” she added. 

“We hope to continue research in this arena about how to effectively screen and treat transgender patients as they present to care, not only in the transgender clinic, but also to primary care providers (ob.gyn., internal medicine, family medicine, pediatrics) who also care for this population” since no specific guidelines currently exist to direct the screening for cardiovascular patients in particular, she said.
 

Findings offer foundation for LGBTQ cardiovascular studies

“This [study] provides us with a good rationale for why we should be considering cardiovascular health in transgender adults,” Billy A. Caceres, PhD, RN, of Columbia University School of Nursing, New York, said in an interview. “It is largely descriptive, but I think that that’s a good step in terms of at least understanding the magnitude of this problem. In addition, I think that what this abstract might do is help lead to future research that examines potentially the associations between not only gender-affirming hormone therapies but other potential social determinants like discrimination or poverty on the cardiovascular health of transgender people,” he noted.

Dr. Caceres served as chair of the writing group for the recent American Heart Association Scientific Statement: LGBTQ Heart Health published in Circulation. He had no financial conflicts to disclose.

The study received no outside funding. Dr. Denby had no financial conflicts to disclose.

SOURCE: Denby KJ et al. AHA 2020, Presentation P2274.

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Cardiovascular disease risk is elevated among transgender individuals seeking gender-affirming hormone therapy, according to a retrospective study in 427 patients.

nktwentythree/Getty Images

The transgender population often experiences socioeconomic and health disparities, including reduced access to care, Kara J. Denby, MD, said in an interview.

Previous research suggests that the use of gender-affirming hormone therapy (GAHT) may place transgender persons at increased cardiovascular risk, she said.

To identify the potential risk for transgender individuals, the researchers identified baseline cardiovascular risk in patients who had not yet undergone GAHT. Study participants were enrolled in a multidisciplinary transgender program, and the researchers collected data on demographics, medical history, vitals, medications, and laboratory results. The average age of the participants was 26 years, 172 identified as men, 236 as women, and 20 as nonbinary.

Overall, 55% of the participants had a chronic medical condition at baseline. Of these, 74 patients had hypertension, 41 had hyperlipidemia, 2 had a history of stroke, 7 had coronary artery disease, and 4 had chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

For all patients who did not have documented atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, their American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association ASCVD and QRISK3 risk scores were calculated. “The incidence of undiagnosed hypertension and hyperlipidemia was 6.8% and 11.3% respectively, and of these cases, only 64% and 24% were on appropriate therapies,” noted Dr. Denby of the Cleveland (Ohio) Clinic.

She reported the results Nov. 13 in a presentation at the at the virtual American Heart Association scientific sessions.

The findings were limited by the observational nature of the study.

However, the results suggest that transgender patients “appear to be at higher risk than their age-matched historical cohorts regardless of gender,” said Dr. Denby. More research is needed, but cardiovascular disease–prevention efforts may be inadequate in the transgender population given the elevated risk observed in this study, she concluded.
 

Growing transgender population is medically underserved

The transgender population is growing in the United States and internationally, said Dr. Denby. “This group has a history of being marginalized as a result of their transgender status with socioeconomic and health repercussions,” she said. “It is well known that transgender patients are less likely to have access to health care or utilize health care for a variety of reasons, including stigma and fear of mistreatment. This often leads transgender individuals to present to care late in disease processes which makes their disease harder to treat and often leads to emergent medical conditions,” she added.

“Transgender men and women are at high risk for cardiovascular disease and often aren’t screened at recommended intervals because of decreased health care use compared to their cisgender counterparts,” she said. “This may lead to untreated diseases that make them even more likely to suffer poor health outcomes.”

The current study is important because there are “almost no prior data regarding the cardiovascular health status of this population prior to gender-affirming care,” Dr. Denby emphasized. “There are data that gay, lesbian, and bisexual individuals are at higher risk for poor cardiovascular outcomes, but the same data are lacking in the transgender group,” she said.

“As transgender individuals have frequent physician visits while on hormonal therapy, this seems like the opportune time to screen for cardiovascular risk factors and treat previously undiagnosed diseases that can lead to poor health outcomes in the future,” Dr. Denby explained. “If we are able to intervene at an earlier age, perhaps we can help prevent poor health outcomes down the road,” she said.
 

 

 

Additional research can inform practice

Dr. Denby said she was not surprised by the findings. “This is a very high-risk population that often doesn’t follow closely in the health care system,” she said. “These data are very important in thinking holistically about transgender patients.” Clinicians can “use the opportunities we have when they present for gender-affirming care to optimize their overall health status, promote long-term health, and reduce the risks associated with hormonal therapy and gender-affirming surgeries,” she noted. “We hope to use this information to change our practice at the Cleveland Clinic and nationally as well. Transgender patients should be screened and aggressively treated for cardiovascular disease and risk factors,” she said.

Key barriers to overcome include determining the best way to reach out to transgender individuals and then making them feel comfortable in the clinical setting, Dr. Denby said. “This means that we must set up clinics that are approachable and safe for all comers. The lack of laws in many states that protect this vulnerable population also contributes to lack of access to care,” she added. 

“We hope to continue research in this arena about how to effectively screen and treat transgender patients as they present to care, not only in the transgender clinic, but also to primary care providers (ob.gyn., internal medicine, family medicine, pediatrics) who also care for this population” since no specific guidelines currently exist to direct the screening for cardiovascular patients in particular, she said.
 

Findings offer foundation for LGBTQ cardiovascular studies

“This [study] provides us with a good rationale for why we should be considering cardiovascular health in transgender adults,” Billy A. Caceres, PhD, RN, of Columbia University School of Nursing, New York, said in an interview. “It is largely descriptive, but I think that that’s a good step in terms of at least understanding the magnitude of this problem. In addition, I think that what this abstract might do is help lead to future research that examines potentially the associations between not only gender-affirming hormone therapies but other potential social determinants like discrimination or poverty on the cardiovascular health of transgender people,” he noted.

Dr. Caceres served as chair of the writing group for the recent American Heart Association Scientific Statement: LGBTQ Heart Health published in Circulation. He had no financial conflicts to disclose.

The study received no outside funding. Dr. Denby had no financial conflicts to disclose.

SOURCE: Denby KJ et al. AHA 2020, Presentation P2274.

Cardiovascular disease risk is elevated among transgender individuals seeking gender-affirming hormone therapy, according to a retrospective study in 427 patients.

nktwentythree/Getty Images

The transgender population often experiences socioeconomic and health disparities, including reduced access to care, Kara J. Denby, MD, said in an interview.

Previous research suggests that the use of gender-affirming hormone therapy (GAHT) may place transgender persons at increased cardiovascular risk, she said.

To identify the potential risk for transgender individuals, the researchers identified baseline cardiovascular risk in patients who had not yet undergone GAHT. Study participants were enrolled in a multidisciplinary transgender program, and the researchers collected data on demographics, medical history, vitals, medications, and laboratory results. The average age of the participants was 26 years, 172 identified as men, 236 as women, and 20 as nonbinary.

Overall, 55% of the participants had a chronic medical condition at baseline. Of these, 74 patients had hypertension, 41 had hyperlipidemia, 2 had a history of stroke, 7 had coronary artery disease, and 4 had chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

For all patients who did not have documented atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, their American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association ASCVD and QRISK3 risk scores were calculated. “The incidence of undiagnosed hypertension and hyperlipidemia was 6.8% and 11.3% respectively, and of these cases, only 64% and 24% were on appropriate therapies,” noted Dr. Denby of the Cleveland (Ohio) Clinic.

She reported the results Nov. 13 in a presentation at the at the virtual American Heart Association scientific sessions.

The findings were limited by the observational nature of the study.

However, the results suggest that transgender patients “appear to be at higher risk than their age-matched historical cohorts regardless of gender,” said Dr. Denby. More research is needed, but cardiovascular disease–prevention efforts may be inadequate in the transgender population given the elevated risk observed in this study, she concluded.
 

Growing transgender population is medically underserved

The transgender population is growing in the United States and internationally, said Dr. Denby. “This group has a history of being marginalized as a result of their transgender status with socioeconomic and health repercussions,” she said. “It is well known that transgender patients are less likely to have access to health care or utilize health care for a variety of reasons, including stigma and fear of mistreatment. This often leads transgender individuals to present to care late in disease processes which makes their disease harder to treat and often leads to emergent medical conditions,” she added.

“Transgender men and women are at high risk for cardiovascular disease and often aren’t screened at recommended intervals because of decreased health care use compared to their cisgender counterparts,” she said. “This may lead to untreated diseases that make them even more likely to suffer poor health outcomes.”

The current study is important because there are “almost no prior data regarding the cardiovascular health status of this population prior to gender-affirming care,” Dr. Denby emphasized. “There are data that gay, lesbian, and bisexual individuals are at higher risk for poor cardiovascular outcomes, but the same data are lacking in the transgender group,” she said.

“As transgender individuals have frequent physician visits while on hormonal therapy, this seems like the opportune time to screen for cardiovascular risk factors and treat previously undiagnosed diseases that can lead to poor health outcomes in the future,” Dr. Denby explained. “If we are able to intervene at an earlier age, perhaps we can help prevent poor health outcomes down the road,” she said.
 

 

 

Additional research can inform practice

Dr. Denby said she was not surprised by the findings. “This is a very high-risk population that often doesn’t follow closely in the health care system,” she said. “These data are very important in thinking holistically about transgender patients.” Clinicians can “use the opportunities we have when they present for gender-affirming care to optimize their overall health status, promote long-term health, and reduce the risks associated with hormonal therapy and gender-affirming surgeries,” she noted. “We hope to use this information to change our practice at the Cleveland Clinic and nationally as well. Transgender patients should be screened and aggressively treated for cardiovascular disease and risk factors,” she said.

Key barriers to overcome include determining the best way to reach out to transgender individuals and then making them feel comfortable in the clinical setting, Dr. Denby said. “This means that we must set up clinics that are approachable and safe for all comers. The lack of laws in many states that protect this vulnerable population also contributes to lack of access to care,” she added. 

“We hope to continue research in this arena about how to effectively screen and treat transgender patients as they present to care, not only in the transgender clinic, but also to primary care providers (ob.gyn., internal medicine, family medicine, pediatrics) who also care for this population” since no specific guidelines currently exist to direct the screening for cardiovascular patients in particular, she said.
 

Findings offer foundation for LGBTQ cardiovascular studies

“This [study] provides us with a good rationale for why we should be considering cardiovascular health in transgender adults,” Billy A. Caceres, PhD, RN, of Columbia University School of Nursing, New York, said in an interview. “It is largely descriptive, but I think that that’s a good step in terms of at least understanding the magnitude of this problem. In addition, I think that what this abstract might do is help lead to future research that examines potentially the associations between not only gender-affirming hormone therapies but other potential social determinants like discrimination or poverty on the cardiovascular health of transgender people,” he noted.

Dr. Caceres served as chair of the writing group for the recent American Heart Association Scientific Statement: LGBTQ Heart Health published in Circulation. He had no financial conflicts to disclose.

The study received no outside funding. Dr. Denby had no financial conflicts to disclose.

SOURCE: Denby KJ et al. AHA 2020, Presentation P2274.

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Virtual AHA 2020 may influence template for postpandemic scientific sessions

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Thu, 11/12/2020 - 12:11

Cardiologists are already old hands at virtual meetings this year and are fast becoming experts on Zoom and other teleconferencing platforms, if not on how to unmute their microphones.

With expectations perhaps elevated and the new communications genre’s novelty on the wane, the American Heart Association (AHA) Scientific Sessions 2020 has a chance to both innovate with familiar formats and captivate with the field’s latest research findings.

Although the virtual AHA 2020 might not satisfy longings for face-to-face networking, shop talk, or kidding around over coffee, it will feature many traditional elements of the live conferences adapted for ear buds and small screens. They include late-breaking science (LBS) presentations and panel discussions, poster and live oral abstract presentations, meet-the-trialist talks, fireside-chat discussion forums, early career events, and satellite symposia.

The event may well hold lessons for future iterations of AHA Scientific Sessions in the postpandemic world, which some foresee as, potentially, an amalgam of the time-honored live format and a robust, complementary online presence.

Dr. Donald Lloyd-Jones


“I can’t commit to exactly what AHA sessions will look like next November; I think that’s still being looked at,” the organization’s president-elect Donald M. Lloyd-Jones, MD, ScM, chair of the AHA Committee on Scientific Sessions Programming, told theheart.org | Medscape Cardiology. 

There’s no debating that a live conference is valuable “for career networking and other opportunities, so I don’t think we can do without it. That has to be an important part of it,” he said. “When we can safely, of course.”

Still, “the virtual platform democratizes, right? I mean, it just allows greater access for a broader audience, and I think that’s important, too,” said Lloyd-Jones, MD, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago.

“I don’t think we’ll ever go completely back to it being all in-person,” he said. “I think the world has changed, and we’ll have to adapt our platforms to recognize that.”

Online, at least, meeting registrants will get a better look at Anthony Fauci, MD, than one might from the middle rows of a vast ballroom-turned-auditorium. Fauci is scheduled to speak on “Public Health and Scientific Challenges” during the Main Event Session “Latest Insights on COVID 19 and Cardiovascular Disease,” slated for the meeting’s final day.

Fauci has directed the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) since 1984, and has been celebrated for his leadership roles in the battles against AIDS and Ebola virus. Today, his name is close to a household word for his service as a prominent though embattled member of the White House Coronavirus Task Force.

The virtual AHA sessions will feature a core collection of LBS presentations from often high-profile clinical trials and other studies the organization deems worthy of special attention. There are nine such presentations arrayed across the meeting’s five days — from Friday, November 13 to Tuesday, November 17 — at times listed in this story and throughout the AHA Scientific Session program synched with the Central Standard Time (CST) zone of the AHA’s home office in Dallas.

Late-Breaking Science 1. Friday, November 13, 10:30 AM - 11:30 AM CST

The LBS sessions launch with the GALACTIC-HF trial, which — the world recently learned — may expand the burgeoning list of meds shown to improve clinical outcomes in chronic heart failure (HF) with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF).

In cursory top-line results announced last month, those in the trial of more than 8000 patients who were randomly assigned to receive omecamtiv mecarbil (Amgen/Cytokinetics/Servier) showed a slight but significant benefit for the primary end point of cardiovascular (CV) death or HF events. The hazard ratio (HR), compared with standard care, was 0.92 (95% CI, 0.86 - 0.99; P = .025), noted a press release from Amgen.

Among the announcement’s few other details was a short take on safety outcomes: no difference in risk for “adverse events, including major ischemic cardiac events,” between the active and control groups. The presentation is sure to provide further insights and caveats, if any, along with other information crucial to the study’s interpretation.

Next on the schedule is the closely watched AFFIRM-AHF, billed as the first major outcomes trial of iron administration to iron-deficient patients with acute HF. It randomly assigned more than 1000 such patients to receive IV ferric carboxymaltose or a placebo. The first dose was given in-hospital and subsequent doses at home for 24 weeks or until patients were no longer iron deficient. They were followed to 1 year for the primary end point of recurrent HF hospitalizations or CV death.

The session wraps with the VITAL Rhythm trial, a substudy of the doubly randomized VITAL trial that explored the effects of vitamin D and omega-3 fatty acid supplementation on CV and cancer risk in more than 25,000 patients in the community. The substudy explored the effects of two active therapies, a preparation of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) (Omacor, Reliant Pharmaceuticals) or vitamin D3 supplements, on new-onset atrial fibrillation (AF) as the primary end point; it also looked at risk for sudden death.
 

 

 

Late-Breaking Science 2. Friday, November 13, 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM CST

Dominating the session in two presentations, the (TIPS)-3 trial explored a polypill primary-prevention strategy and daily aspirin with vitamin D supplementation in three separate placebo-controlled comparisons in more than 5700 “intermediate risk” participants 55 years and older, mostly in developing countries.

The daily polypill in this trial is a combination of hydrochlorothiazide 25 mg, atenolol 100 mg, ramipril 10 mg, and simvastatin 40 mg; aspirin was given at 75 mg daily and vitamin D at 60,000 IU monthly.

The participants are followed for a primary end point composed of major CV disease, HF, resuscitated cardiac arrest, or ischemia-driven revascularization for the polypill comparison; CV events or cancer for the aspirin comparison; and fracture risk for the vitamin D component of the trial.

In the Swedish Cardiopulmonary Bioimage Study (SCAPIS), presented third in the session, a random sample of adults from throughout Sweden, projected at about 30,000, underwent a 2-day evaluation for metabolic risk factors plus ultrasound and coronary and lung CT scans. The group has been followed for risks for myocardial infarction (MI), sudden death, and other cardiac diseases; and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and other lung disorders.
 

Late-Breaking Science 3. Saturday, November 14, 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM CST

The field may learn more mechanistically about MI associated with nonobstructed coronary arteries (MINOCA) than ever before from the Heart Attack Research Program-Imaging Study (HARP). The observational study is enrolling a projected 450 patients with suspected MI and ischemic symptoms who were referred for cardiac catheterization.

Their evaluation includes coronary optical coherence tomographic (OCT) scanning and cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging for evidence of coronary plaque disruption as the primary end point. The patients are to be followed for 10 years for a composite of death, unstable angina, stroke, recurrent MI, diagnostic or interventional catheterization, and cardiac hospitalization.

The major direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) comparisons with warfarin in atrial fibrillation (AF) didn’t include many patients with prosthetic valve implants. In contrast, the RIVER trial enrolled 1005 adults with either persistent or paroxysmal AF and bioprosthetic mitral valves and assigned them to rivaroxaban 20 mg or the vitamin K antagonist.

The presentation will include the noninferiority primary outcome of major clinical events, which is stroke, transient ischemic attack (TIA), major bleeding, death from any cause, valve thrombosis, other systemic embolism, or HF hospitalization over 12 months.

This session also includes ALPHEUS, a trial pitting ticagrelor (Brilinta/Brilique, AstraZeneca) against mainstay clopidogrel in a setting that is mostly uncharted for such comparisons, elective percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI).

About 1900 patients with stable coronary disease were randomly assigned to a month of treatment with either agent on top of continuous aspirin. The primary end point is PCI-related MI or myocardial injury within 48 hours of the procedure.
 

Late-Breaking Science 4. Sunday, November 15, 9:00 AM - 10:00 AM CST

The Self-Assessment Method for Statin Side-effects Or Nocebo (SAMSON) trial may be one of the AHA 2020 frontrunners for early buzz and anticipation. So it’s with some irony that it’s also among the smallest of the LBS studies, at 60 patients, which was nonetheless considered sufficient due to its unusual design.

SAMSON is the latest and perhaps most rigorous attempt to clarify whether symptoms, especially muscle pain or discomfort, attributed to statins by many patients are pharmacologic in origin or, rather, a nocebo effect from negative expectations about statin side effects.

The study patients, all of whom had previously halted statins because of side effects, were assigned to follow three separate regimens, each for month, in a randomized order; they did that four times, for a total of 12 months. The regimens consisted of atorvastatin 20 mg daily, a placebo, or neither.

Patients kept daily logs of any perceived side effects. Parity between side effects experienced on the statin and the placebo would point to a nocebo effect, whereas a significant excess on atorvastatin would suggest they are direct drug effects.

The session also features two randomized trials each on a unique omega-3 fatty acid preparation for either secondary prevention or high-risk primary prevention, in both cases compared with a corn-oil placebo.

The Omega-3 Fatty Acids in Elderly Patients with Myocardial Infarction (OMEMI) trial randomly assigned more than 1000 elderly post-MI patients to take Pikasol (Orkla Care) at 1.8 g EPA and DHA per day or the placebo. It looked for all-cause mortality, nonfatal MI, stroke, revascularization, or hospitalization for new or worsened HF over 24 months.

The STRENGTH trial, with a planned enrollment of about 13,000 high-vascular-risk patients, looked primarily at the effect of daily treatment with Epanova (AstraZeneca), which also contains DHA and EPA, on the composite of CV death, nonfatal MI or stroke, coronary revascularization, and hospitalization for unstable angina. The trial was halted early for low likelihood of benefit, AstraZeneca announced in January of this year.
 

 

 

Late-Breaking Science 5. Sunday, November 15, 7:15 PM - 8:30 PM CST

Slated for the session is the primary analysis of the PIONEER 3 trial, conducted in the United States, Europe, and Japan. It compared the BuMA Supreme biodegradable drug-coated stent (SinoMed) with the durable Xience (Abbott Vascular) and Promus (Boston Scientific) drug-eluting stents. The trial followed more than 1600 patients treated for chronic stable angina or acute coronary syndrome (ACS) for the 1-year composite of cardiac death, target-vessel-related MI, and clinically driven target-lesion revascularization.
 

Late-Breaking Science 6. Monday, November 16, 9:00 AM - 10:00 AM CST

The EARLY-AF trial enrolled 303 patients with symptomatic paroxysmal or persistent AF suitable for catheter ablation, assigning them to pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) by cryoablation using the Arctic Front (Medtronic) system or antiarrhythmic drug therapy for rhythm control. The primary end point is time to recurrence of AF, atrial flutter, or atrial tachycardia, whether symptomatic or asymptomatic, as determined by implantable loop recorder. Patients will also be followed for symptoms and arrhythmia burden.

Also in the session, the SEARCH-AF study randomized almost 400 patients undergoing cardiac surgery who were engaged subacutely with one of two commercial portable cardiac rhythm monitoring devices (CardioSTAT, Icentia; or SEEQ, Medtronic) or, alternatively, to receive usual postoperative care

The patients, considered to be at high risk for stroke with no history of AF, were followed for the primary end point of cumulative burden of AF or atrial flutter exceeding 6 minutes or documentation of either arrhythmia by 12-lead ECG within 30 days.

Two other studies in the session look at different approaches to AF screening, one using a handheld ECG monitor in the primary care setting and the other wearable monitors in the form of a patch or wristband. The VITAL-AF presentation is titled “Screening for Atrial Fibrillation in Older Adults at Primary Care Visits Using Single Lead Electrocardiograms.” The other presentation, on the study mSToPS, is called “Three-Year Clinical Outcomes in a Nationwide, Randomized, Pragmatic Clinical Trial of Atrial Fibrillation Screening — Mhealth Screening to Prevent Strokes.”
 

Late-Breaking Science 7. Monday, November 16, 7:00 PM - 8:30 PM CST

In the randomized FIDELIO-DKD trial with more than 5700 patients with type 2 diabetes and associated kidney disease, those assigned to the novel mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist (MRA) finerenone (Bayer) showed an 18% drop in risk for adverse renal events, including death from renal causes (P = .001), over a median of 2.6 years. That primary outcome was previously presented in detail at a nephrology meeting and published in the New England Journal of Medicine in October.

Patients on the MRA showed a similar reduction in a composite CV-event end point, it was also reported at that time. A follow-up presentation at the AHA sessions promises to dive deeper into the trial’s CV outcomes.

In the RAPID-CTCA study, slated next for the session, 1749 patients with suspected or confirmed intermediate-risk ACS were randomly assigned to undergo computed tomographic coronary angiography (CTCA) for guiding treatment decisions or a standard-of-care strategy. It followed patients for the primary end point of death or nonfatal MI over 1 year.

Rilonacept (Arcalyst, Kiniksa/Regeneron) is an interleukin-1α and -1β inhibitor used in several autoinflammatory diseases that went unsuccessfully before regulators for the treatment of gout. The RHAPSODY trial has now explored its use against recurrent pericarditis in a randomized trial that entered 86 patients 12 years and older who had previously experienced at least three episodes.

In top-line results reported to investors in June, patients assigned to receive the drug instead of placebo in weekly injections showed a 96% drop in risk for pericarditis recurrence and “no or minimal pain” on more than 90% of days in the trial. A full presentation is expected during this LBS session.

Also on the schedule is the THALES study, which led the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to expand indications for ticagrelor to include stroke prevention in patients with a history of acute ischemic stroke or high-risk TIA based on the trial’s primary results published in July.

In THALES, more than 11,000 patients with mild to moderate acute noncardiogenic ischemic stroke or TIA were randomly assigned within 24 hours to start on daily aspirin with or without ticagrelor given as a 180 mg loading dose followed by 90 mg twice daily for 30 days.

At the end of a month, it was reported, those on dual antiplatelet therapy showed a 17% risk reduction (P = .02) for the primary end point of stroke or death, at the cost of a slight but significant increase in “severe” bleeding (0.5% vs 0.1%; P = .001).

The session is to conclude with two related studies that fell victim in part to the COVID-19 pandemic, both of which explored sotagliflozin (Zynquista, Sanofi/Lexicon), an inhibitor of both sodium-glucose cotransporters 1 and 2 (SGLT1 and SGLT2, respectively) in patients with type 2 diabetes.

SOLOIST-WHF had entered 1222 such patients hospitalized with urgent or worsening HF at 466 centers and randomly assigned them to receive sotagliflozin or placebo; they were followed for the composite of CV death or HF events. SCORED reached an enrollment of 10,584 patients with diabetes and chronic kidney disease at 754 hospitals, following them for the same primary end point.

Lexicon announced in March that the trials would be “closed out early” because of the unavailability of funding “together with uncertainties relating to the COVID-19 pandemic on the trials.” The LBS presentation is expected to include analyses of available data; SOLOIST-WHF launched in summer 2018 and SCORED began in November 2017.
 

 

 

Late-Breaking Science 8. Tuesday, November 17, 9:00 AM - 10:00 AM CST

Most of this LBS session is devoted to the AHA COVID-19 Cardiovascular Disease registry, which is looking at the hospital journey, clinical course, and outcomes of patients hospitalized with SARS-CoV-2 infections at centers participating in the organization’s Get With The Guidelines (GWTG) quality-improvement program. As of September, the registry included data from more than 15,000 patients.

Scheduled presentations include a summary of the registry’s design and initial results; an analysis of racial and ethnic variation in therapy and clinical outcomes; an exploration of how body mass index influenced outcomes, including death, use of mechanical ventilation, and cardiovascular end points, in patients with COVID-19; and a deep dive into the relation between CV disease and clinical outcomes in the cohort.

The last of this LBS block’s five talks will cover the randomized Influenza Vaccine to Effectively Stop Cardio Thoracic Events and Decompensated Heart Failure (INVESTED) trial, which compared vaccination with high-dose trivalent influenza vaccine or a standard-dose quadrivalent vaccine in 5388 adults with a history of hospitalization for either MI or HF. Patients were required to have at least one other CV risk factor, such as older age, reduced left ventricular ejection fraction, or diabetes.

INVESTED tracked the patients at 190 centers across an initial pilot flu season and three subsequent flu seasons for the primary end point of death from any cause or cardiopulmonary hospitalization.

The trial is one of at least three that have been looking at the effect of flu vaccination on cardiovascular outcomes; results from the other two — IAMI, with more than 2500 participants, and RCT-IVVE, with an enrollment of 4871 — are planned for presentation in 2021, theheart.org | Medscape Cardiology recently reported.
 

Late-Breaking Science 9. Tuesday, November 17, 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM CST

The conference’s concluding LBS session features three studies that relied on technologic strategies for modifying patient compliance and other care behaviors and one that used human-centered design principles to develop a group-care model aimed improving the management of diabetes, hypertension, and other noncommunicable diseases in economically disadvantaged regions of Kenya.

The EPIC-HF trial tested a strategy for improving HFrEF medication-plan engagement by use of a video and documents delivered to patients several times by email or text prior to their follow-up clinic appointments. The strategy was compared with usual care for its effect on HF-medication optimization over 1 month and 1 year in a total of 306 patients.

Following EPIC-HF on the schedule is the MYROAD trial, looking at the efficacy of discharge instructions provided to patients with acute HF as an audio recording that they and their physicians could replay on demand, the idea being to increase adherence to the instructions. The trial’s 1073 patients were assigned to the novel strategy or usual care and followed for HF rehospitalization within 30 days.

MYROAD is to be followed by a presentation entitled “Digital Care Transformation: One-Year Report of >5,000 Patients Enrolled in a Remote Algorithm-Based CV Risk Management Program to Achieve Optimal Lipid and Hypertension Control.”

Rounding out the LBS session: the Bridging Income Generation With Group Integrated Care (BIGPIC) program, a pilot study that developed and executed “a healthcare delivery model targeting health behaviors, medication adherence, and financial barriers to accessing healthcare” in four rural counties in Kenya.

The model features locally developed plans, tailored for regional needs, that are said to “combine the benefits of microfinance with the peer support available through group medical care to enhance management of hypertension and diabetes.” The microfinance component is aimed at improving household economies to alleviate the financial burden of care and clinic attendance, and for the health effects of improved quality of life.

The study randomized 2890 adults with diabetes or prediabetes to one of four groups: usual care plus microfinance group support, group medical visits only or combined with microfinance group support, or usual care only. They were followed for changes in systolic blood pressure and CV-risk score over 12 months.

Lloyd-Jones and Fauci declared no conflicts.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Cardiologists are already old hands at virtual meetings this year and are fast becoming experts on Zoom and other teleconferencing platforms, if not on how to unmute their microphones.

With expectations perhaps elevated and the new communications genre’s novelty on the wane, the American Heart Association (AHA) Scientific Sessions 2020 has a chance to both innovate with familiar formats and captivate with the field’s latest research findings.

Although the virtual AHA 2020 might not satisfy longings for face-to-face networking, shop talk, or kidding around over coffee, it will feature many traditional elements of the live conferences adapted for ear buds and small screens. They include late-breaking science (LBS) presentations and panel discussions, poster and live oral abstract presentations, meet-the-trialist talks, fireside-chat discussion forums, early career events, and satellite symposia.

The event may well hold lessons for future iterations of AHA Scientific Sessions in the postpandemic world, which some foresee as, potentially, an amalgam of the time-honored live format and a robust, complementary online presence.

Dr. Donald Lloyd-Jones


“I can’t commit to exactly what AHA sessions will look like next November; I think that’s still being looked at,” the organization’s president-elect Donald M. Lloyd-Jones, MD, ScM, chair of the AHA Committee on Scientific Sessions Programming, told theheart.org | Medscape Cardiology. 

There’s no debating that a live conference is valuable “for career networking and other opportunities, so I don’t think we can do without it. That has to be an important part of it,” he said. “When we can safely, of course.”

Still, “the virtual platform democratizes, right? I mean, it just allows greater access for a broader audience, and I think that’s important, too,” said Lloyd-Jones, MD, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago.

“I don’t think we’ll ever go completely back to it being all in-person,” he said. “I think the world has changed, and we’ll have to adapt our platforms to recognize that.”

Online, at least, meeting registrants will get a better look at Anthony Fauci, MD, than one might from the middle rows of a vast ballroom-turned-auditorium. Fauci is scheduled to speak on “Public Health and Scientific Challenges” during the Main Event Session “Latest Insights on COVID 19 and Cardiovascular Disease,” slated for the meeting’s final day.

Fauci has directed the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) since 1984, and has been celebrated for his leadership roles in the battles against AIDS and Ebola virus. Today, his name is close to a household word for his service as a prominent though embattled member of the White House Coronavirus Task Force.

The virtual AHA sessions will feature a core collection of LBS presentations from often high-profile clinical trials and other studies the organization deems worthy of special attention. There are nine such presentations arrayed across the meeting’s five days — from Friday, November 13 to Tuesday, November 17 — at times listed in this story and throughout the AHA Scientific Session program synched with the Central Standard Time (CST) zone of the AHA’s home office in Dallas.

Late-Breaking Science 1. Friday, November 13, 10:30 AM - 11:30 AM CST

The LBS sessions launch with the GALACTIC-HF trial, which — the world recently learned — may expand the burgeoning list of meds shown to improve clinical outcomes in chronic heart failure (HF) with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF).

In cursory top-line results announced last month, those in the trial of more than 8000 patients who were randomly assigned to receive omecamtiv mecarbil (Amgen/Cytokinetics/Servier) showed a slight but significant benefit for the primary end point of cardiovascular (CV) death or HF events. The hazard ratio (HR), compared with standard care, was 0.92 (95% CI, 0.86 - 0.99; P = .025), noted a press release from Amgen.

Among the announcement’s few other details was a short take on safety outcomes: no difference in risk for “adverse events, including major ischemic cardiac events,” between the active and control groups. The presentation is sure to provide further insights and caveats, if any, along with other information crucial to the study’s interpretation.

Next on the schedule is the closely watched AFFIRM-AHF, billed as the first major outcomes trial of iron administration to iron-deficient patients with acute HF. It randomly assigned more than 1000 such patients to receive IV ferric carboxymaltose or a placebo. The first dose was given in-hospital and subsequent doses at home for 24 weeks or until patients were no longer iron deficient. They were followed to 1 year for the primary end point of recurrent HF hospitalizations or CV death.

The session wraps with the VITAL Rhythm trial, a substudy of the doubly randomized VITAL trial that explored the effects of vitamin D and omega-3 fatty acid supplementation on CV and cancer risk in more than 25,000 patients in the community. The substudy explored the effects of two active therapies, a preparation of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) (Omacor, Reliant Pharmaceuticals) or vitamin D3 supplements, on new-onset atrial fibrillation (AF) as the primary end point; it also looked at risk for sudden death.
 

 

 

Late-Breaking Science 2. Friday, November 13, 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM CST

Dominating the session in two presentations, the (TIPS)-3 trial explored a polypill primary-prevention strategy and daily aspirin with vitamin D supplementation in three separate placebo-controlled comparisons in more than 5700 “intermediate risk” participants 55 years and older, mostly in developing countries.

The daily polypill in this trial is a combination of hydrochlorothiazide 25 mg, atenolol 100 mg, ramipril 10 mg, and simvastatin 40 mg; aspirin was given at 75 mg daily and vitamin D at 60,000 IU monthly.

The participants are followed for a primary end point composed of major CV disease, HF, resuscitated cardiac arrest, or ischemia-driven revascularization for the polypill comparison; CV events or cancer for the aspirin comparison; and fracture risk for the vitamin D component of the trial.

In the Swedish Cardiopulmonary Bioimage Study (SCAPIS), presented third in the session, a random sample of adults from throughout Sweden, projected at about 30,000, underwent a 2-day evaluation for metabolic risk factors plus ultrasound and coronary and lung CT scans. The group has been followed for risks for myocardial infarction (MI), sudden death, and other cardiac diseases; and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and other lung disorders.
 

Late-Breaking Science 3. Saturday, November 14, 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM CST

The field may learn more mechanistically about MI associated with nonobstructed coronary arteries (MINOCA) than ever before from the Heart Attack Research Program-Imaging Study (HARP). The observational study is enrolling a projected 450 patients with suspected MI and ischemic symptoms who were referred for cardiac catheterization.

Their evaluation includes coronary optical coherence tomographic (OCT) scanning and cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging for evidence of coronary plaque disruption as the primary end point. The patients are to be followed for 10 years for a composite of death, unstable angina, stroke, recurrent MI, diagnostic or interventional catheterization, and cardiac hospitalization.

The major direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) comparisons with warfarin in atrial fibrillation (AF) didn’t include many patients with prosthetic valve implants. In contrast, the RIVER trial enrolled 1005 adults with either persistent or paroxysmal AF and bioprosthetic mitral valves and assigned them to rivaroxaban 20 mg or the vitamin K antagonist.

The presentation will include the noninferiority primary outcome of major clinical events, which is stroke, transient ischemic attack (TIA), major bleeding, death from any cause, valve thrombosis, other systemic embolism, or HF hospitalization over 12 months.

This session also includes ALPHEUS, a trial pitting ticagrelor (Brilinta/Brilique, AstraZeneca) against mainstay clopidogrel in a setting that is mostly uncharted for such comparisons, elective percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI).

About 1900 patients with stable coronary disease were randomly assigned to a month of treatment with either agent on top of continuous aspirin. The primary end point is PCI-related MI or myocardial injury within 48 hours of the procedure.
 

Late-Breaking Science 4. Sunday, November 15, 9:00 AM - 10:00 AM CST

The Self-Assessment Method for Statin Side-effects Or Nocebo (SAMSON) trial may be one of the AHA 2020 frontrunners for early buzz and anticipation. So it’s with some irony that it’s also among the smallest of the LBS studies, at 60 patients, which was nonetheless considered sufficient due to its unusual design.

SAMSON is the latest and perhaps most rigorous attempt to clarify whether symptoms, especially muscle pain or discomfort, attributed to statins by many patients are pharmacologic in origin or, rather, a nocebo effect from negative expectations about statin side effects.

The study patients, all of whom had previously halted statins because of side effects, were assigned to follow three separate regimens, each for month, in a randomized order; they did that four times, for a total of 12 months. The regimens consisted of atorvastatin 20 mg daily, a placebo, or neither.

Patients kept daily logs of any perceived side effects. Parity between side effects experienced on the statin and the placebo would point to a nocebo effect, whereas a significant excess on atorvastatin would suggest they are direct drug effects.

The session also features two randomized trials each on a unique omega-3 fatty acid preparation for either secondary prevention or high-risk primary prevention, in both cases compared with a corn-oil placebo.

The Omega-3 Fatty Acids in Elderly Patients with Myocardial Infarction (OMEMI) trial randomly assigned more than 1000 elderly post-MI patients to take Pikasol (Orkla Care) at 1.8 g EPA and DHA per day or the placebo. It looked for all-cause mortality, nonfatal MI, stroke, revascularization, or hospitalization for new or worsened HF over 24 months.

The STRENGTH trial, with a planned enrollment of about 13,000 high-vascular-risk patients, looked primarily at the effect of daily treatment with Epanova (AstraZeneca), which also contains DHA and EPA, on the composite of CV death, nonfatal MI or stroke, coronary revascularization, and hospitalization for unstable angina. The trial was halted early for low likelihood of benefit, AstraZeneca announced in January of this year.
 

 

 

Late-Breaking Science 5. Sunday, November 15, 7:15 PM - 8:30 PM CST

Slated for the session is the primary analysis of the PIONEER 3 trial, conducted in the United States, Europe, and Japan. It compared the BuMA Supreme biodegradable drug-coated stent (SinoMed) with the durable Xience (Abbott Vascular) and Promus (Boston Scientific) drug-eluting stents. The trial followed more than 1600 patients treated for chronic stable angina or acute coronary syndrome (ACS) for the 1-year composite of cardiac death, target-vessel-related MI, and clinically driven target-lesion revascularization.
 

Late-Breaking Science 6. Monday, November 16, 9:00 AM - 10:00 AM CST

The EARLY-AF trial enrolled 303 patients with symptomatic paroxysmal or persistent AF suitable for catheter ablation, assigning them to pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) by cryoablation using the Arctic Front (Medtronic) system or antiarrhythmic drug therapy for rhythm control. The primary end point is time to recurrence of AF, atrial flutter, or atrial tachycardia, whether symptomatic or asymptomatic, as determined by implantable loop recorder. Patients will also be followed for symptoms and arrhythmia burden.

Also in the session, the SEARCH-AF study randomized almost 400 patients undergoing cardiac surgery who were engaged subacutely with one of two commercial portable cardiac rhythm monitoring devices (CardioSTAT, Icentia; or SEEQ, Medtronic) or, alternatively, to receive usual postoperative care

The patients, considered to be at high risk for stroke with no history of AF, were followed for the primary end point of cumulative burden of AF or atrial flutter exceeding 6 minutes or documentation of either arrhythmia by 12-lead ECG within 30 days.

Two other studies in the session look at different approaches to AF screening, one using a handheld ECG monitor in the primary care setting and the other wearable monitors in the form of a patch or wristband. The VITAL-AF presentation is titled “Screening for Atrial Fibrillation in Older Adults at Primary Care Visits Using Single Lead Electrocardiograms.” The other presentation, on the study mSToPS, is called “Three-Year Clinical Outcomes in a Nationwide, Randomized, Pragmatic Clinical Trial of Atrial Fibrillation Screening — Mhealth Screening to Prevent Strokes.”
 

Late-Breaking Science 7. Monday, November 16, 7:00 PM - 8:30 PM CST

In the randomized FIDELIO-DKD trial with more than 5700 patients with type 2 diabetes and associated kidney disease, those assigned to the novel mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist (MRA) finerenone (Bayer) showed an 18% drop in risk for adverse renal events, including death from renal causes (P = .001), over a median of 2.6 years. That primary outcome was previously presented in detail at a nephrology meeting and published in the New England Journal of Medicine in October.

Patients on the MRA showed a similar reduction in a composite CV-event end point, it was also reported at that time. A follow-up presentation at the AHA sessions promises to dive deeper into the trial’s CV outcomes.

In the RAPID-CTCA study, slated next for the session, 1749 patients with suspected or confirmed intermediate-risk ACS were randomly assigned to undergo computed tomographic coronary angiography (CTCA) for guiding treatment decisions or a standard-of-care strategy. It followed patients for the primary end point of death or nonfatal MI over 1 year.

Rilonacept (Arcalyst, Kiniksa/Regeneron) is an interleukin-1α and -1β inhibitor used in several autoinflammatory diseases that went unsuccessfully before regulators for the treatment of gout. The RHAPSODY trial has now explored its use against recurrent pericarditis in a randomized trial that entered 86 patients 12 years and older who had previously experienced at least three episodes.

In top-line results reported to investors in June, patients assigned to receive the drug instead of placebo in weekly injections showed a 96% drop in risk for pericarditis recurrence and “no or minimal pain” on more than 90% of days in the trial. A full presentation is expected during this LBS session.

Also on the schedule is the THALES study, which led the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to expand indications for ticagrelor to include stroke prevention in patients with a history of acute ischemic stroke or high-risk TIA based on the trial’s primary results published in July.

In THALES, more than 11,000 patients with mild to moderate acute noncardiogenic ischemic stroke or TIA were randomly assigned within 24 hours to start on daily aspirin with or without ticagrelor given as a 180 mg loading dose followed by 90 mg twice daily for 30 days.

At the end of a month, it was reported, those on dual antiplatelet therapy showed a 17% risk reduction (P = .02) for the primary end point of stroke or death, at the cost of a slight but significant increase in “severe” bleeding (0.5% vs 0.1%; P = .001).

The session is to conclude with two related studies that fell victim in part to the COVID-19 pandemic, both of which explored sotagliflozin (Zynquista, Sanofi/Lexicon), an inhibitor of both sodium-glucose cotransporters 1 and 2 (SGLT1 and SGLT2, respectively) in patients with type 2 diabetes.

SOLOIST-WHF had entered 1222 such patients hospitalized with urgent or worsening HF at 466 centers and randomly assigned them to receive sotagliflozin or placebo; they were followed for the composite of CV death or HF events. SCORED reached an enrollment of 10,584 patients with diabetes and chronic kidney disease at 754 hospitals, following them for the same primary end point.

Lexicon announced in March that the trials would be “closed out early” because of the unavailability of funding “together with uncertainties relating to the COVID-19 pandemic on the trials.” The LBS presentation is expected to include analyses of available data; SOLOIST-WHF launched in summer 2018 and SCORED began in November 2017.
 

 

 

Late-Breaking Science 8. Tuesday, November 17, 9:00 AM - 10:00 AM CST

Most of this LBS session is devoted to the AHA COVID-19 Cardiovascular Disease registry, which is looking at the hospital journey, clinical course, and outcomes of patients hospitalized with SARS-CoV-2 infections at centers participating in the organization’s Get With The Guidelines (GWTG) quality-improvement program. As of September, the registry included data from more than 15,000 patients.

Scheduled presentations include a summary of the registry’s design and initial results; an analysis of racial and ethnic variation in therapy and clinical outcomes; an exploration of how body mass index influenced outcomes, including death, use of mechanical ventilation, and cardiovascular end points, in patients with COVID-19; and a deep dive into the relation between CV disease and clinical outcomes in the cohort.

The last of this LBS block’s five talks will cover the randomized Influenza Vaccine to Effectively Stop Cardio Thoracic Events and Decompensated Heart Failure (INVESTED) trial, which compared vaccination with high-dose trivalent influenza vaccine or a standard-dose quadrivalent vaccine in 5388 adults with a history of hospitalization for either MI or HF. Patients were required to have at least one other CV risk factor, such as older age, reduced left ventricular ejection fraction, or diabetes.

INVESTED tracked the patients at 190 centers across an initial pilot flu season and three subsequent flu seasons for the primary end point of death from any cause or cardiopulmonary hospitalization.

The trial is one of at least three that have been looking at the effect of flu vaccination on cardiovascular outcomes; results from the other two — IAMI, with more than 2500 participants, and RCT-IVVE, with an enrollment of 4871 — are planned for presentation in 2021, theheart.org | Medscape Cardiology recently reported.
 

Late-Breaking Science 9. Tuesday, November 17, 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM CST

The conference’s concluding LBS session features three studies that relied on technologic strategies for modifying patient compliance and other care behaviors and one that used human-centered design principles to develop a group-care model aimed improving the management of diabetes, hypertension, and other noncommunicable diseases in economically disadvantaged regions of Kenya.

The EPIC-HF trial tested a strategy for improving HFrEF medication-plan engagement by use of a video and documents delivered to patients several times by email or text prior to their follow-up clinic appointments. The strategy was compared with usual care for its effect on HF-medication optimization over 1 month and 1 year in a total of 306 patients.

Following EPIC-HF on the schedule is the MYROAD trial, looking at the efficacy of discharge instructions provided to patients with acute HF as an audio recording that they and their physicians could replay on demand, the idea being to increase adherence to the instructions. The trial’s 1073 patients were assigned to the novel strategy or usual care and followed for HF rehospitalization within 30 days.

MYROAD is to be followed by a presentation entitled “Digital Care Transformation: One-Year Report of >5,000 Patients Enrolled in a Remote Algorithm-Based CV Risk Management Program to Achieve Optimal Lipid and Hypertension Control.”

Rounding out the LBS session: the Bridging Income Generation With Group Integrated Care (BIGPIC) program, a pilot study that developed and executed “a healthcare delivery model targeting health behaviors, medication adherence, and financial barriers to accessing healthcare” in four rural counties in Kenya.

The model features locally developed plans, tailored for regional needs, that are said to “combine the benefits of microfinance with the peer support available through group medical care to enhance management of hypertension and diabetes.” The microfinance component is aimed at improving household economies to alleviate the financial burden of care and clinic attendance, and for the health effects of improved quality of life.

The study randomized 2890 adults with diabetes or prediabetes to one of four groups: usual care plus microfinance group support, group medical visits only or combined with microfinance group support, or usual care only. They were followed for changes in systolic blood pressure and CV-risk score over 12 months.

Lloyd-Jones and Fauci declared no conflicts.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Cardiologists are already old hands at virtual meetings this year and are fast becoming experts on Zoom and other teleconferencing platforms, if not on how to unmute their microphones.

With expectations perhaps elevated and the new communications genre’s novelty on the wane, the American Heart Association (AHA) Scientific Sessions 2020 has a chance to both innovate with familiar formats and captivate with the field’s latest research findings.

Although the virtual AHA 2020 might not satisfy longings for face-to-face networking, shop talk, or kidding around over coffee, it will feature many traditional elements of the live conferences adapted for ear buds and small screens. They include late-breaking science (LBS) presentations and panel discussions, poster and live oral abstract presentations, meet-the-trialist talks, fireside-chat discussion forums, early career events, and satellite symposia.

The event may well hold lessons for future iterations of AHA Scientific Sessions in the postpandemic world, which some foresee as, potentially, an amalgam of the time-honored live format and a robust, complementary online presence.

Dr. Donald Lloyd-Jones


“I can’t commit to exactly what AHA sessions will look like next November; I think that’s still being looked at,” the organization’s president-elect Donald M. Lloyd-Jones, MD, ScM, chair of the AHA Committee on Scientific Sessions Programming, told theheart.org | Medscape Cardiology. 

There’s no debating that a live conference is valuable “for career networking and other opportunities, so I don’t think we can do without it. That has to be an important part of it,” he said. “When we can safely, of course.”

Still, “the virtual platform democratizes, right? I mean, it just allows greater access for a broader audience, and I think that’s important, too,” said Lloyd-Jones, MD, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago.

“I don’t think we’ll ever go completely back to it being all in-person,” he said. “I think the world has changed, and we’ll have to adapt our platforms to recognize that.”

Online, at least, meeting registrants will get a better look at Anthony Fauci, MD, than one might from the middle rows of a vast ballroom-turned-auditorium. Fauci is scheduled to speak on “Public Health and Scientific Challenges” during the Main Event Session “Latest Insights on COVID 19 and Cardiovascular Disease,” slated for the meeting’s final day.

Fauci has directed the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) since 1984, and has been celebrated for his leadership roles in the battles against AIDS and Ebola virus. Today, his name is close to a household word for his service as a prominent though embattled member of the White House Coronavirus Task Force.

The virtual AHA sessions will feature a core collection of LBS presentations from often high-profile clinical trials and other studies the organization deems worthy of special attention. There are nine such presentations arrayed across the meeting’s five days — from Friday, November 13 to Tuesday, November 17 — at times listed in this story and throughout the AHA Scientific Session program synched with the Central Standard Time (CST) zone of the AHA’s home office in Dallas.

Late-Breaking Science 1. Friday, November 13, 10:30 AM - 11:30 AM CST

The LBS sessions launch with the GALACTIC-HF trial, which — the world recently learned — may expand the burgeoning list of meds shown to improve clinical outcomes in chronic heart failure (HF) with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF).

In cursory top-line results announced last month, those in the trial of more than 8000 patients who were randomly assigned to receive omecamtiv mecarbil (Amgen/Cytokinetics/Servier) showed a slight but significant benefit for the primary end point of cardiovascular (CV) death or HF events. The hazard ratio (HR), compared with standard care, was 0.92 (95% CI, 0.86 - 0.99; P = .025), noted a press release from Amgen.

Among the announcement’s few other details was a short take on safety outcomes: no difference in risk for “adverse events, including major ischemic cardiac events,” between the active and control groups. The presentation is sure to provide further insights and caveats, if any, along with other information crucial to the study’s interpretation.

Next on the schedule is the closely watched AFFIRM-AHF, billed as the first major outcomes trial of iron administration to iron-deficient patients with acute HF. It randomly assigned more than 1000 such patients to receive IV ferric carboxymaltose or a placebo. The first dose was given in-hospital and subsequent doses at home for 24 weeks or until patients were no longer iron deficient. They were followed to 1 year for the primary end point of recurrent HF hospitalizations or CV death.

The session wraps with the VITAL Rhythm trial, a substudy of the doubly randomized VITAL trial that explored the effects of vitamin D and omega-3 fatty acid supplementation on CV and cancer risk in more than 25,000 patients in the community. The substudy explored the effects of two active therapies, a preparation of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) (Omacor, Reliant Pharmaceuticals) or vitamin D3 supplements, on new-onset atrial fibrillation (AF) as the primary end point; it also looked at risk for sudden death.
 

 

 

Late-Breaking Science 2. Friday, November 13, 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM CST

Dominating the session in two presentations, the (TIPS)-3 trial explored a polypill primary-prevention strategy and daily aspirin with vitamin D supplementation in three separate placebo-controlled comparisons in more than 5700 “intermediate risk” participants 55 years and older, mostly in developing countries.

The daily polypill in this trial is a combination of hydrochlorothiazide 25 mg, atenolol 100 mg, ramipril 10 mg, and simvastatin 40 mg; aspirin was given at 75 mg daily and vitamin D at 60,000 IU monthly.

The participants are followed for a primary end point composed of major CV disease, HF, resuscitated cardiac arrest, or ischemia-driven revascularization for the polypill comparison; CV events or cancer for the aspirin comparison; and fracture risk for the vitamin D component of the trial.

In the Swedish Cardiopulmonary Bioimage Study (SCAPIS), presented third in the session, a random sample of adults from throughout Sweden, projected at about 30,000, underwent a 2-day evaluation for metabolic risk factors plus ultrasound and coronary and lung CT scans. The group has been followed for risks for myocardial infarction (MI), sudden death, and other cardiac diseases; and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and other lung disorders.
 

Late-Breaking Science 3. Saturday, November 14, 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM CST

The field may learn more mechanistically about MI associated with nonobstructed coronary arteries (MINOCA) than ever before from the Heart Attack Research Program-Imaging Study (HARP). The observational study is enrolling a projected 450 patients with suspected MI and ischemic symptoms who were referred for cardiac catheterization.

Their evaluation includes coronary optical coherence tomographic (OCT) scanning and cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging for evidence of coronary plaque disruption as the primary end point. The patients are to be followed for 10 years for a composite of death, unstable angina, stroke, recurrent MI, diagnostic or interventional catheterization, and cardiac hospitalization.

The major direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) comparisons with warfarin in atrial fibrillation (AF) didn’t include many patients with prosthetic valve implants. In contrast, the RIVER trial enrolled 1005 adults with either persistent or paroxysmal AF and bioprosthetic mitral valves and assigned them to rivaroxaban 20 mg or the vitamin K antagonist.

The presentation will include the noninferiority primary outcome of major clinical events, which is stroke, transient ischemic attack (TIA), major bleeding, death from any cause, valve thrombosis, other systemic embolism, or HF hospitalization over 12 months.

This session also includes ALPHEUS, a trial pitting ticagrelor (Brilinta/Brilique, AstraZeneca) against mainstay clopidogrel in a setting that is mostly uncharted for such comparisons, elective percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI).

About 1900 patients with stable coronary disease were randomly assigned to a month of treatment with either agent on top of continuous aspirin. The primary end point is PCI-related MI or myocardial injury within 48 hours of the procedure.
 

Late-Breaking Science 4. Sunday, November 15, 9:00 AM - 10:00 AM CST

The Self-Assessment Method for Statin Side-effects Or Nocebo (SAMSON) trial may be one of the AHA 2020 frontrunners for early buzz and anticipation. So it’s with some irony that it’s also among the smallest of the LBS studies, at 60 patients, which was nonetheless considered sufficient due to its unusual design.

SAMSON is the latest and perhaps most rigorous attempt to clarify whether symptoms, especially muscle pain or discomfort, attributed to statins by many patients are pharmacologic in origin or, rather, a nocebo effect from negative expectations about statin side effects.

The study patients, all of whom had previously halted statins because of side effects, were assigned to follow three separate regimens, each for month, in a randomized order; they did that four times, for a total of 12 months. The regimens consisted of atorvastatin 20 mg daily, a placebo, or neither.

Patients kept daily logs of any perceived side effects. Parity between side effects experienced on the statin and the placebo would point to a nocebo effect, whereas a significant excess on atorvastatin would suggest they are direct drug effects.

The session also features two randomized trials each on a unique omega-3 fatty acid preparation for either secondary prevention or high-risk primary prevention, in both cases compared with a corn-oil placebo.

The Omega-3 Fatty Acids in Elderly Patients with Myocardial Infarction (OMEMI) trial randomly assigned more than 1000 elderly post-MI patients to take Pikasol (Orkla Care) at 1.8 g EPA and DHA per day or the placebo. It looked for all-cause mortality, nonfatal MI, stroke, revascularization, or hospitalization for new or worsened HF over 24 months.

The STRENGTH trial, with a planned enrollment of about 13,000 high-vascular-risk patients, looked primarily at the effect of daily treatment with Epanova (AstraZeneca), which also contains DHA and EPA, on the composite of CV death, nonfatal MI or stroke, coronary revascularization, and hospitalization for unstable angina. The trial was halted early for low likelihood of benefit, AstraZeneca announced in January of this year.
 

 

 

Late-Breaking Science 5. Sunday, November 15, 7:15 PM - 8:30 PM CST

Slated for the session is the primary analysis of the PIONEER 3 trial, conducted in the United States, Europe, and Japan. It compared the BuMA Supreme biodegradable drug-coated stent (SinoMed) with the durable Xience (Abbott Vascular) and Promus (Boston Scientific) drug-eluting stents. The trial followed more than 1600 patients treated for chronic stable angina or acute coronary syndrome (ACS) for the 1-year composite of cardiac death, target-vessel-related MI, and clinically driven target-lesion revascularization.
 

Late-Breaking Science 6. Monday, November 16, 9:00 AM - 10:00 AM CST

The EARLY-AF trial enrolled 303 patients with symptomatic paroxysmal or persistent AF suitable for catheter ablation, assigning them to pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) by cryoablation using the Arctic Front (Medtronic) system or antiarrhythmic drug therapy for rhythm control. The primary end point is time to recurrence of AF, atrial flutter, or atrial tachycardia, whether symptomatic or asymptomatic, as determined by implantable loop recorder. Patients will also be followed for symptoms and arrhythmia burden.

Also in the session, the SEARCH-AF study randomized almost 400 patients undergoing cardiac surgery who were engaged subacutely with one of two commercial portable cardiac rhythm monitoring devices (CardioSTAT, Icentia; or SEEQ, Medtronic) or, alternatively, to receive usual postoperative care

The patients, considered to be at high risk for stroke with no history of AF, were followed for the primary end point of cumulative burden of AF or atrial flutter exceeding 6 minutes or documentation of either arrhythmia by 12-lead ECG within 30 days.

Two other studies in the session look at different approaches to AF screening, one using a handheld ECG monitor in the primary care setting and the other wearable monitors in the form of a patch or wristband. The VITAL-AF presentation is titled “Screening for Atrial Fibrillation in Older Adults at Primary Care Visits Using Single Lead Electrocardiograms.” The other presentation, on the study mSToPS, is called “Three-Year Clinical Outcomes in a Nationwide, Randomized, Pragmatic Clinical Trial of Atrial Fibrillation Screening — Mhealth Screening to Prevent Strokes.”
 

Late-Breaking Science 7. Monday, November 16, 7:00 PM - 8:30 PM CST

In the randomized FIDELIO-DKD trial with more than 5700 patients with type 2 diabetes and associated kidney disease, those assigned to the novel mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist (MRA) finerenone (Bayer) showed an 18% drop in risk for adverse renal events, including death from renal causes (P = .001), over a median of 2.6 years. That primary outcome was previously presented in detail at a nephrology meeting and published in the New England Journal of Medicine in October.

Patients on the MRA showed a similar reduction in a composite CV-event end point, it was also reported at that time. A follow-up presentation at the AHA sessions promises to dive deeper into the trial’s CV outcomes.

In the RAPID-CTCA study, slated next for the session, 1749 patients with suspected or confirmed intermediate-risk ACS were randomly assigned to undergo computed tomographic coronary angiography (CTCA) for guiding treatment decisions or a standard-of-care strategy. It followed patients for the primary end point of death or nonfatal MI over 1 year.

Rilonacept (Arcalyst, Kiniksa/Regeneron) is an interleukin-1α and -1β inhibitor used in several autoinflammatory diseases that went unsuccessfully before regulators for the treatment of gout. The RHAPSODY trial has now explored its use against recurrent pericarditis in a randomized trial that entered 86 patients 12 years and older who had previously experienced at least three episodes.

In top-line results reported to investors in June, patients assigned to receive the drug instead of placebo in weekly injections showed a 96% drop in risk for pericarditis recurrence and “no or minimal pain” on more than 90% of days in the trial. A full presentation is expected during this LBS session.

Also on the schedule is the THALES study, which led the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to expand indications for ticagrelor to include stroke prevention in patients with a history of acute ischemic stroke or high-risk TIA based on the trial’s primary results published in July.

In THALES, more than 11,000 patients with mild to moderate acute noncardiogenic ischemic stroke or TIA were randomly assigned within 24 hours to start on daily aspirin with or without ticagrelor given as a 180 mg loading dose followed by 90 mg twice daily for 30 days.

At the end of a month, it was reported, those on dual antiplatelet therapy showed a 17% risk reduction (P = .02) for the primary end point of stroke or death, at the cost of a slight but significant increase in “severe” bleeding (0.5% vs 0.1%; P = .001).

The session is to conclude with two related studies that fell victim in part to the COVID-19 pandemic, both of which explored sotagliflozin (Zynquista, Sanofi/Lexicon), an inhibitor of both sodium-glucose cotransporters 1 and 2 (SGLT1 and SGLT2, respectively) in patients with type 2 diabetes.

SOLOIST-WHF had entered 1222 such patients hospitalized with urgent or worsening HF at 466 centers and randomly assigned them to receive sotagliflozin or placebo; they were followed for the composite of CV death or HF events. SCORED reached an enrollment of 10,584 patients with diabetes and chronic kidney disease at 754 hospitals, following them for the same primary end point.

Lexicon announced in March that the trials would be “closed out early” because of the unavailability of funding “together with uncertainties relating to the COVID-19 pandemic on the trials.” The LBS presentation is expected to include analyses of available data; SOLOIST-WHF launched in summer 2018 and SCORED began in November 2017.
 

 

 

Late-Breaking Science 8. Tuesday, November 17, 9:00 AM - 10:00 AM CST

Most of this LBS session is devoted to the AHA COVID-19 Cardiovascular Disease registry, which is looking at the hospital journey, clinical course, and outcomes of patients hospitalized with SARS-CoV-2 infections at centers participating in the organization’s Get With The Guidelines (GWTG) quality-improvement program. As of September, the registry included data from more than 15,000 patients.

Scheduled presentations include a summary of the registry’s design and initial results; an analysis of racial and ethnic variation in therapy and clinical outcomes; an exploration of how body mass index influenced outcomes, including death, use of mechanical ventilation, and cardiovascular end points, in patients with COVID-19; and a deep dive into the relation between CV disease and clinical outcomes in the cohort.

The last of this LBS block’s five talks will cover the randomized Influenza Vaccine to Effectively Stop Cardio Thoracic Events and Decompensated Heart Failure (INVESTED) trial, which compared vaccination with high-dose trivalent influenza vaccine or a standard-dose quadrivalent vaccine in 5388 adults with a history of hospitalization for either MI or HF. Patients were required to have at least one other CV risk factor, such as older age, reduced left ventricular ejection fraction, or diabetes.

INVESTED tracked the patients at 190 centers across an initial pilot flu season and three subsequent flu seasons for the primary end point of death from any cause or cardiopulmonary hospitalization.

The trial is one of at least three that have been looking at the effect of flu vaccination on cardiovascular outcomes; results from the other two — IAMI, with more than 2500 participants, and RCT-IVVE, with an enrollment of 4871 — are planned for presentation in 2021, theheart.org | Medscape Cardiology recently reported.
 

Late-Breaking Science 9. Tuesday, November 17, 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM CST

The conference’s concluding LBS session features three studies that relied on technologic strategies for modifying patient compliance and other care behaviors and one that used human-centered design principles to develop a group-care model aimed improving the management of diabetes, hypertension, and other noncommunicable diseases in economically disadvantaged regions of Kenya.

The EPIC-HF trial tested a strategy for improving HFrEF medication-plan engagement by use of a video and documents delivered to patients several times by email or text prior to their follow-up clinic appointments. The strategy was compared with usual care for its effect on HF-medication optimization over 1 month and 1 year in a total of 306 patients.

Following EPIC-HF on the schedule is the MYROAD trial, looking at the efficacy of discharge instructions provided to patients with acute HF as an audio recording that they and their physicians could replay on demand, the idea being to increase adherence to the instructions. The trial’s 1073 patients were assigned to the novel strategy or usual care and followed for HF rehospitalization within 30 days.

MYROAD is to be followed by a presentation entitled “Digital Care Transformation: One-Year Report of >5,000 Patients Enrolled in a Remote Algorithm-Based CV Risk Management Program to Achieve Optimal Lipid and Hypertension Control.”

Rounding out the LBS session: the Bridging Income Generation With Group Integrated Care (BIGPIC) program, a pilot study that developed and executed “a healthcare delivery model targeting health behaviors, medication adherence, and financial barriers to accessing healthcare” in four rural counties in Kenya.

The model features locally developed plans, tailored for regional needs, that are said to “combine the benefits of microfinance with the peer support available through group medical care to enhance management of hypertension and diabetes.” The microfinance component is aimed at improving household economies to alleviate the financial burden of care and clinic attendance, and for the health effects of improved quality of life.

The study randomized 2890 adults with diabetes or prediabetes to one of four groups: usual care plus microfinance group support, group medical visits only or combined with microfinance group support, or usual care only. They were followed for changes in systolic blood pressure and CV-risk score over 12 months.

Lloyd-Jones and Fauci declared no conflicts.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Proinflammatory dietary pattern linked to higher CV risk

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Wed, 11/11/2020 - 13:53

Dietary patterns with higher inflammatory potential were significantly associated with a higher incidence of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and stroke in a new pooled analysis of three prospective cohort studies.

The analysis included 210,145 U.S. women and men followed for up to 32 years in the Nurses’ Health Studies I and II and the Health Professionals Follow-up Study.

After adjustment for use of anti-inflammatory medications and CVD risk factors, those whose dietary pattern ranked in the highest quintile of inflammatory potential had a 38% higher risk of CVD (hazard ratio comparing highest with lowest quintiles, 1.38), a 46% higher risk of coronary heart disease (HR, 1.46), and a 28% higher risk of stroke (HR, 1.28) (all P for trend < .001).

Jun Li, MD, PhD, and colleagues at Harvard School of Public Health and Harvard Medical School, Boston, published the findings of their study in the Nov. 10 issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

The inflammatory potential of a diet was assessed using a food-based, dietary index called the “empirical dietary inflammatory pattern” or EDIP.

In an interview, Dr. Li explained that the EDIP was developed 4 years ago by many of the same authors involved with this study, including nutrition heavyweights Walter C. Willett, MD, DrPH, and Frank B. Hu, MD, PhD, both from Harvard.

“We summarized all the foods people eat into 39 defined food groups and did a reduced-rank regression analysis that looked at these 39 food groups and three inflammatory markers – interleukin-6, C-reactive protein, and tumor necrosis factor–alpha receptor 2. We found 18 food groups that are most predictive of these biomarkers, and the EDIP was calculated as the weighted sum of these 18 food groups.”

Individuals who had higher intakes of green-leafy vegetables (kale, spinach, arugula), dark-yellow vegetables (pumpkin, yellow peppers, carrots), whole grains, fruits, tea, coffee and wine had lower long-term CVD risk than those with higher intakes of red meat, processed meat, organ meat, refined carbohydrates, and sweetened beverages. 

The associations were consistent across cohorts and between sexes and remained significant in multiple sensitivity analysis that adjusted for alcohol consumption, smoking pack-years, use of lipid-lowering and antihypertensive medications, sodium intake, and blood pressure.

In a secondary analysis, diets with higher inflammatory potential were also associated with significantly higher biomarker levels indicative of more systemic, vascular, and metabolic inflammation, as well as less favorable lipid profiles.

“We wanted to be able to provide guidance on dietary patterns and food combinations,” said Dr. Li. “If you tell people to eat more polyunsaturated fats instead of saturated fat or trans fat, most people don’t know what foods are higher and lower in those nutrients. Also, many foods have different nutrients – some of which are good and some of which are bad – so we wanted to help people find the foods with the higher proportion of healthy nutrients rather than point out specific nutrients to avoid.”

Researchers used prospectively gathered data from the Nurses’ Health Studies I and II starting from 1984 and from the Health Professionals Follow-up Study. After excluding participants with missing diet information or previously diagnosed heart disease, stroke or cancer, over 210,000 participants were included in the analysis. Participants completed a survey every 4 years to ascertain dietary intake. 
 

 

 

Prevention, not treatment

In an editorial comment, Ramon Estruch, MD, PhD, from the Hospital Clinic in Barcelona, and colleagues suggested that it might be time for better dietary guidelines.

“A better knowledge of health protection provided by different foods and dietary patterns, mainly their anti-inflammatory properties, should provide the basis for designing even healthier dietary patterns to protect against heart disease,” the editorialists wrote.

They added extra-virgin olive oil, fatty fish, and tomatoes to the list of foods with “established anti-inflammatory activity.”

In a comment, Dr. Estruch said the findings of this new study are confirmatory of the PREDIMED trial, which showed a reduction in risk of major CV events in individuals at high cardiovascular risk assigned to an anti-inflammatory Mediterranean diet pattern supplemented with extra-virgin olive oil or nuts as compared with those assigned to a reduced-fat diet. 

“The study of Jun Li et al. confirms that an anti-inflammatory diet is useful to prevent cardiovascular events and, more important, that healthy dietary patterns may be even healthier if subjects increase consumption of foods with the highest anti-inflammatory potential,” he said, adding that “mechanistic explanations add plausibility to the results of observational studies.”

Dr. Estruch was the principal investigator of PREDIMED. This trial was originally published in 2013 and then retracted and republished in 2018, with some required corrections, but the results had not materially changed.

Dr. Li is supported by grants from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases and Boston Nutrition Obesity Research Center. Dr. Estruch disclosed no financial relationships relevant to the contents of this article.  

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

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Dietary patterns with higher inflammatory potential were significantly associated with a higher incidence of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and stroke in a new pooled analysis of three prospective cohort studies.

The analysis included 210,145 U.S. women and men followed for up to 32 years in the Nurses’ Health Studies I and II and the Health Professionals Follow-up Study.

After adjustment for use of anti-inflammatory medications and CVD risk factors, those whose dietary pattern ranked in the highest quintile of inflammatory potential had a 38% higher risk of CVD (hazard ratio comparing highest with lowest quintiles, 1.38), a 46% higher risk of coronary heart disease (HR, 1.46), and a 28% higher risk of stroke (HR, 1.28) (all P for trend < .001).

Jun Li, MD, PhD, and colleagues at Harvard School of Public Health and Harvard Medical School, Boston, published the findings of their study in the Nov. 10 issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

The inflammatory potential of a diet was assessed using a food-based, dietary index called the “empirical dietary inflammatory pattern” or EDIP.

In an interview, Dr. Li explained that the EDIP was developed 4 years ago by many of the same authors involved with this study, including nutrition heavyweights Walter C. Willett, MD, DrPH, and Frank B. Hu, MD, PhD, both from Harvard.

“We summarized all the foods people eat into 39 defined food groups and did a reduced-rank regression analysis that looked at these 39 food groups and three inflammatory markers – interleukin-6, C-reactive protein, and tumor necrosis factor–alpha receptor 2. We found 18 food groups that are most predictive of these biomarkers, and the EDIP was calculated as the weighted sum of these 18 food groups.”

Individuals who had higher intakes of green-leafy vegetables (kale, spinach, arugula), dark-yellow vegetables (pumpkin, yellow peppers, carrots), whole grains, fruits, tea, coffee and wine had lower long-term CVD risk than those with higher intakes of red meat, processed meat, organ meat, refined carbohydrates, and sweetened beverages. 

The associations were consistent across cohorts and between sexes and remained significant in multiple sensitivity analysis that adjusted for alcohol consumption, smoking pack-years, use of lipid-lowering and antihypertensive medications, sodium intake, and blood pressure.

In a secondary analysis, diets with higher inflammatory potential were also associated with significantly higher biomarker levels indicative of more systemic, vascular, and metabolic inflammation, as well as less favorable lipid profiles.

“We wanted to be able to provide guidance on dietary patterns and food combinations,” said Dr. Li. “If you tell people to eat more polyunsaturated fats instead of saturated fat or trans fat, most people don’t know what foods are higher and lower in those nutrients. Also, many foods have different nutrients – some of which are good and some of which are bad – so we wanted to help people find the foods with the higher proportion of healthy nutrients rather than point out specific nutrients to avoid.”

Researchers used prospectively gathered data from the Nurses’ Health Studies I and II starting from 1984 and from the Health Professionals Follow-up Study. After excluding participants with missing diet information or previously diagnosed heart disease, stroke or cancer, over 210,000 participants were included in the analysis. Participants completed a survey every 4 years to ascertain dietary intake. 
 

 

 

Prevention, not treatment

In an editorial comment, Ramon Estruch, MD, PhD, from the Hospital Clinic in Barcelona, and colleagues suggested that it might be time for better dietary guidelines.

“A better knowledge of health protection provided by different foods and dietary patterns, mainly their anti-inflammatory properties, should provide the basis for designing even healthier dietary patterns to protect against heart disease,” the editorialists wrote.

They added extra-virgin olive oil, fatty fish, and tomatoes to the list of foods with “established anti-inflammatory activity.”

In a comment, Dr. Estruch said the findings of this new study are confirmatory of the PREDIMED trial, which showed a reduction in risk of major CV events in individuals at high cardiovascular risk assigned to an anti-inflammatory Mediterranean diet pattern supplemented with extra-virgin olive oil or nuts as compared with those assigned to a reduced-fat diet. 

“The study of Jun Li et al. confirms that an anti-inflammatory diet is useful to prevent cardiovascular events and, more important, that healthy dietary patterns may be even healthier if subjects increase consumption of foods with the highest anti-inflammatory potential,” he said, adding that “mechanistic explanations add plausibility to the results of observational studies.”

Dr. Estruch was the principal investigator of PREDIMED. This trial was originally published in 2013 and then retracted and republished in 2018, with some required corrections, but the results had not materially changed.

Dr. Li is supported by grants from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases and Boston Nutrition Obesity Research Center. Dr. Estruch disclosed no financial relationships relevant to the contents of this article.  

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

Dietary patterns with higher inflammatory potential were significantly associated with a higher incidence of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and stroke in a new pooled analysis of three prospective cohort studies.

The analysis included 210,145 U.S. women and men followed for up to 32 years in the Nurses’ Health Studies I and II and the Health Professionals Follow-up Study.

After adjustment for use of anti-inflammatory medications and CVD risk factors, those whose dietary pattern ranked in the highest quintile of inflammatory potential had a 38% higher risk of CVD (hazard ratio comparing highest with lowest quintiles, 1.38), a 46% higher risk of coronary heart disease (HR, 1.46), and a 28% higher risk of stroke (HR, 1.28) (all P for trend < .001).

Jun Li, MD, PhD, and colleagues at Harvard School of Public Health and Harvard Medical School, Boston, published the findings of their study in the Nov. 10 issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

The inflammatory potential of a diet was assessed using a food-based, dietary index called the “empirical dietary inflammatory pattern” or EDIP.

In an interview, Dr. Li explained that the EDIP was developed 4 years ago by many of the same authors involved with this study, including nutrition heavyweights Walter C. Willett, MD, DrPH, and Frank B. Hu, MD, PhD, both from Harvard.

“We summarized all the foods people eat into 39 defined food groups and did a reduced-rank regression analysis that looked at these 39 food groups and three inflammatory markers – interleukin-6, C-reactive protein, and tumor necrosis factor–alpha receptor 2. We found 18 food groups that are most predictive of these biomarkers, and the EDIP was calculated as the weighted sum of these 18 food groups.”

Individuals who had higher intakes of green-leafy vegetables (kale, spinach, arugula), dark-yellow vegetables (pumpkin, yellow peppers, carrots), whole grains, fruits, tea, coffee and wine had lower long-term CVD risk than those with higher intakes of red meat, processed meat, organ meat, refined carbohydrates, and sweetened beverages. 

The associations were consistent across cohorts and between sexes and remained significant in multiple sensitivity analysis that adjusted for alcohol consumption, smoking pack-years, use of lipid-lowering and antihypertensive medications, sodium intake, and blood pressure.

In a secondary analysis, diets with higher inflammatory potential were also associated with significantly higher biomarker levels indicative of more systemic, vascular, and metabolic inflammation, as well as less favorable lipid profiles.

“We wanted to be able to provide guidance on dietary patterns and food combinations,” said Dr. Li. “If you tell people to eat more polyunsaturated fats instead of saturated fat or trans fat, most people don’t know what foods are higher and lower in those nutrients. Also, many foods have different nutrients – some of which are good and some of which are bad – so we wanted to help people find the foods with the higher proportion of healthy nutrients rather than point out specific nutrients to avoid.”

Researchers used prospectively gathered data from the Nurses’ Health Studies I and II starting from 1984 and from the Health Professionals Follow-up Study. After excluding participants with missing diet information or previously diagnosed heart disease, stroke or cancer, over 210,000 participants were included in the analysis. Participants completed a survey every 4 years to ascertain dietary intake. 
 

 

 

Prevention, not treatment

In an editorial comment, Ramon Estruch, MD, PhD, from the Hospital Clinic in Barcelona, and colleagues suggested that it might be time for better dietary guidelines.

“A better knowledge of health protection provided by different foods and dietary patterns, mainly their anti-inflammatory properties, should provide the basis for designing even healthier dietary patterns to protect against heart disease,” the editorialists wrote.

They added extra-virgin olive oil, fatty fish, and tomatoes to the list of foods with “established anti-inflammatory activity.”

In a comment, Dr. Estruch said the findings of this new study are confirmatory of the PREDIMED trial, which showed a reduction in risk of major CV events in individuals at high cardiovascular risk assigned to an anti-inflammatory Mediterranean diet pattern supplemented with extra-virgin olive oil or nuts as compared with those assigned to a reduced-fat diet. 

“The study of Jun Li et al. confirms that an anti-inflammatory diet is useful to prevent cardiovascular events and, more important, that healthy dietary patterns may be even healthier if subjects increase consumption of foods with the highest anti-inflammatory potential,” he said, adding that “mechanistic explanations add plausibility to the results of observational studies.”

Dr. Estruch was the principal investigator of PREDIMED. This trial was originally published in 2013 and then retracted and republished in 2018, with some required corrections, but the results had not materially changed.

Dr. Li is supported by grants from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases and Boston Nutrition Obesity Research Center. Dr. Estruch disclosed no financial relationships relevant to the contents of this article.  

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

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No link shown between thyroid dysfunction and heart failure

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Changed
Wed, 11/11/2020 - 18:42

Thyroid dysfunction had virtually no independent impact on survival in a retrospective study of nearly 5,000 English patients with chronic heart failure, adding to evidence that subclinical thyroid disorders in these patients requires no special management beyond ongoing monitoring.

Sebastian Kaulitzki/Fotolia

“Although thyroid dysfunction is related to outcome in patients with chronic heart failure, the association disappears when adjustment is made for established prognostic variables, such as age, NT-proBNP [N-terminal of the prohormone brain natriuretic peptide], and [New York Heart Association] class,” wrote Nathan A. Samuel, MBChB, and coauthors in the American Journal of Cardiology.

Results from several earlier studies had shown evidence for reduced survival in heart failure patients with thyroid dysfunction, but in analyses that did not adjust for heart failure severity, such as a 2013 report that used data from the Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure Trial SCD-HeFT. Other studies that adjusted for heart failure severity based on serum level of natriuretic peptides did not show significant associations between thyroid function and mortality, and when those results couple with the new report they together minimize the immediate risk from subclinical thyroid dysfunction faced by heart failure patients, wrote the authors of the new report.


Don’t treat subclinical thyroid dysfunction

“Our results suggest that subclinical thyroid disease has little impact on outcomes, and that we should not treat subclinical hypothyroidism in the expectation of improving outlook,” said Andrew L. Clark, MD, senior author on the new report and professor and head of the department of academic cardiology at Hull (England) York Medical School.

“Both hyper-and hypothyroidism can cause heart failure, so thyroid function should always be checked in patients when they present with heart failure. A small proportion of patients have heart failure that is potentially reversible” with thyroid-directed treatment, Dr. Clark said in an interview.

But “subclinical disease should probably not be treated, although we have not conducted a clinical trial that proves this assertion. We speculate, based on our findings, that such a trial is unlikely to be positive.”

Patients with subclinical thyroid disorders, particularly subclinical hypothyroidism, “need to be followed and treated should they develop clinical disease,” he maintained. “Except in extreme circumstances, such as the handful of patients who might have gross myxedema and may be near coma, thyroid replacement therapy for those [with heart failure] who have clinical hypothyroidism should follow standard lines.”

It is important to monitor thyroid function,” agreed Dr. Samuel, a researcher in the department of academic cardiology at Hull York Medical School. “We found that thyroxine use was most common among patients with hyperthyroidism, suggesting that they were previously hypothyroid and had received inappropriate treatment.”



Confounder adjustment mitigates the thyroid link

The new analysis used data collected from 6,782 consecutive heart failure patients enrolled during 2000-2018 at a community heart failure clinic that serves patients in the region of Hull, England. The researchers identified 4,992 of these patients with confirmed heart failure and adequate data for their analyses, including 2,997 (60%) with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) and 1,995 (40%) with heart failure with normal ejection fraction (HFnEF, the term used by the authors but often called heart failure with preserved ejection fraction).

Thyroid hormone levels showed that 90% of these patients were euthyroid, 6% were hyperthyroid, and 4% were hypothyroid, rates consistent with prior reports for both the general population and heart failure patients. Only 12 patients (0.2%) had overt hypothyroidism, and fewer that 1% (about 45 patients) had overt hyperthyroidism. Patients averaged about 73 years of age, and during a median 4.6 years of follow-up 58% died.

Both the hypo- and hyperthyroid patients showed significantly higher mortality rates than euthyroid patients in a univariate analysis. But the patients with thyroid dysfunction also had more comorbidities, more severe heart failure symptoms measured by NYHA functional class, and more severe heart failure measured as higher serum levels of NT-proBNP.



In a multivariate analysis that adjusted for these factors, the significant differences disappeared among the entire group of heart failure patients for the outcomes of all-cause mortality, and mortality or hospitalization with heart failure. The multivariate analysis also showed no significant association between higher levels of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) and all-cause death or death plus heart failure hospitalization among the patients with HFrEF.

Among patients with HFnEF, the multivariate adjusted analysis showed a small increase in both mortality and mortality plus hospitalization for heart failure, a 2% rise for each of these two endpoints for each 1 mIU/L increase in TSH, the authors reported. Although the P value for each of these two significant differences among patients with HFnEF was .02, the 95% confidence interval included 1.00 and ranged from 1.00 to 1.04.

The multivariate analysis identified three variables with the strongest associations with all-cause mortality: older age, higher levels of NT-proBNP, and higher NYHA class indicating greater functional impairment.

The results support the hypothesis that “worsening heart failure can lead to down-regulation of thyroid hormone signaling,” the authors suggested. Their study is also “the first to examine the prognostic significance of thyroid dysfunction in a large population of patients with HFnEF.” This analysis showed a “weak but significant association between increasing TSH and both mortality and the composite endpoint in patients with HFnEF.”

“HFnEF is a heterogeneous group of conditions that are difficult to diagnose in many cases. Therefore, future studies are needed to provide further clarity on the effect of thyroid dysfunction in these patients,” Dr. Samuel said.

The study received no commercial funding. Dr. Samuel and Dr. Clark had no disclosures.

SOURCE: Samuel NA et al. Am J Cardiol. 2020 Oct 24. doi: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2020.10.034.

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Thyroid dysfunction had virtually no independent impact on survival in a retrospective study of nearly 5,000 English patients with chronic heart failure, adding to evidence that subclinical thyroid disorders in these patients requires no special management beyond ongoing monitoring.

Sebastian Kaulitzki/Fotolia

“Although thyroid dysfunction is related to outcome in patients with chronic heart failure, the association disappears when adjustment is made for established prognostic variables, such as age, NT-proBNP [N-terminal of the prohormone brain natriuretic peptide], and [New York Heart Association] class,” wrote Nathan A. Samuel, MBChB, and coauthors in the American Journal of Cardiology.

Results from several earlier studies had shown evidence for reduced survival in heart failure patients with thyroid dysfunction, but in analyses that did not adjust for heart failure severity, such as a 2013 report that used data from the Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure Trial SCD-HeFT. Other studies that adjusted for heart failure severity based on serum level of natriuretic peptides did not show significant associations between thyroid function and mortality, and when those results couple with the new report they together minimize the immediate risk from subclinical thyroid dysfunction faced by heart failure patients, wrote the authors of the new report.


Don’t treat subclinical thyroid dysfunction

“Our results suggest that subclinical thyroid disease has little impact on outcomes, and that we should not treat subclinical hypothyroidism in the expectation of improving outlook,” said Andrew L. Clark, MD, senior author on the new report and professor and head of the department of academic cardiology at Hull (England) York Medical School.

“Both hyper-and hypothyroidism can cause heart failure, so thyroid function should always be checked in patients when they present with heart failure. A small proportion of patients have heart failure that is potentially reversible” with thyroid-directed treatment, Dr. Clark said in an interview.

But “subclinical disease should probably not be treated, although we have not conducted a clinical trial that proves this assertion. We speculate, based on our findings, that such a trial is unlikely to be positive.”

Patients with subclinical thyroid disorders, particularly subclinical hypothyroidism, “need to be followed and treated should they develop clinical disease,” he maintained. “Except in extreme circumstances, such as the handful of patients who might have gross myxedema and may be near coma, thyroid replacement therapy for those [with heart failure] who have clinical hypothyroidism should follow standard lines.”

It is important to monitor thyroid function,” agreed Dr. Samuel, a researcher in the department of academic cardiology at Hull York Medical School. “We found that thyroxine use was most common among patients with hyperthyroidism, suggesting that they were previously hypothyroid and had received inappropriate treatment.”



Confounder adjustment mitigates the thyroid link

The new analysis used data collected from 6,782 consecutive heart failure patients enrolled during 2000-2018 at a community heart failure clinic that serves patients in the region of Hull, England. The researchers identified 4,992 of these patients with confirmed heart failure and adequate data for their analyses, including 2,997 (60%) with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) and 1,995 (40%) with heart failure with normal ejection fraction (HFnEF, the term used by the authors but often called heart failure with preserved ejection fraction).

Thyroid hormone levels showed that 90% of these patients were euthyroid, 6% were hyperthyroid, and 4% were hypothyroid, rates consistent with prior reports for both the general population and heart failure patients. Only 12 patients (0.2%) had overt hypothyroidism, and fewer that 1% (about 45 patients) had overt hyperthyroidism. Patients averaged about 73 years of age, and during a median 4.6 years of follow-up 58% died.

Both the hypo- and hyperthyroid patients showed significantly higher mortality rates than euthyroid patients in a univariate analysis. But the patients with thyroid dysfunction also had more comorbidities, more severe heart failure symptoms measured by NYHA functional class, and more severe heart failure measured as higher serum levels of NT-proBNP.



In a multivariate analysis that adjusted for these factors, the significant differences disappeared among the entire group of heart failure patients for the outcomes of all-cause mortality, and mortality or hospitalization with heart failure. The multivariate analysis also showed no significant association between higher levels of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) and all-cause death or death plus heart failure hospitalization among the patients with HFrEF.

Among patients with HFnEF, the multivariate adjusted analysis showed a small increase in both mortality and mortality plus hospitalization for heart failure, a 2% rise for each of these two endpoints for each 1 mIU/L increase in TSH, the authors reported. Although the P value for each of these two significant differences among patients with HFnEF was .02, the 95% confidence interval included 1.00 and ranged from 1.00 to 1.04.

The multivariate analysis identified three variables with the strongest associations with all-cause mortality: older age, higher levels of NT-proBNP, and higher NYHA class indicating greater functional impairment.

The results support the hypothesis that “worsening heart failure can lead to down-regulation of thyroid hormone signaling,” the authors suggested. Their study is also “the first to examine the prognostic significance of thyroid dysfunction in a large population of patients with HFnEF.” This analysis showed a “weak but significant association between increasing TSH and both mortality and the composite endpoint in patients with HFnEF.”

“HFnEF is a heterogeneous group of conditions that are difficult to diagnose in many cases. Therefore, future studies are needed to provide further clarity on the effect of thyroid dysfunction in these patients,” Dr. Samuel said.

The study received no commercial funding. Dr. Samuel and Dr. Clark had no disclosures.

SOURCE: Samuel NA et al. Am J Cardiol. 2020 Oct 24. doi: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2020.10.034.

Thyroid dysfunction had virtually no independent impact on survival in a retrospective study of nearly 5,000 English patients with chronic heart failure, adding to evidence that subclinical thyroid disorders in these patients requires no special management beyond ongoing monitoring.

Sebastian Kaulitzki/Fotolia

“Although thyroid dysfunction is related to outcome in patients with chronic heart failure, the association disappears when adjustment is made for established prognostic variables, such as age, NT-proBNP [N-terminal of the prohormone brain natriuretic peptide], and [New York Heart Association] class,” wrote Nathan A. Samuel, MBChB, and coauthors in the American Journal of Cardiology.

Results from several earlier studies had shown evidence for reduced survival in heart failure patients with thyroid dysfunction, but in analyses that did not adjust for heart failure severity, such as a 2013 report that used data from the Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure Trial SCD-HeFT. Other studies that adjusted for heart failure severity based on serum level of natriuretic peptides did not show significant associations between thyroid function and mortality, and when those results couple with the new report they together minimize the immediate risk from subclinical thyroid dysfunction faced by heart failure patients, wrote the authors of the new report.


Don’t treat subclinical thyroid dysfunction

“Our results suggest that subclinical thyroid disease has little impact on outcomes, and that we should not treat subclinical hypothyroidism in the expectation of improving outlook,” said Andrew L. Clark, MD, senior author on the new report and professor and head of the department of academic cardiology at Hull (England) York Medical School.

“Both hyper-and hypothyroidism can cause heart failure, so thyroid function should always be checked in patients when they present with heart failure. A small proportion of patients have heart failure that is potentially reversible” with thyroid-directed treatment, Dr. Clark said in an interview.

But “subclinical disease should probably not be treated, although we have not conducted a clinical trial that proves this assertion. We speculate, based on our findings, that such a trial is unlikely to be positive.”

Patients with subclinical thyroid disorders, particularly subclinical hypothyroidism, “need to be followed and treated should they develop clinical disease,” he maintained. “Except in extreme circumstances, such as the handful of patients who might have gross myxedema and may be near coma, thyroid replacement therapy for those [with heart failure] who have clinical hypothyroidism should follow standard lines.”

It is important to monitor thyroid function,” agreed Dr. Samuel, a researcher in the department of academic cardiology at Hull York Medical School. “We found that thyroxine use was most common among patients with hyperthyroidism, suggesting that they were previously hypothyroid and had received inappropriate treatment.”



Confounder adjustment mitigates the thyroid link

The new analysis used data collected from 6,782 consecutive heart failure patients enrolled during 2000-2018 at a community heart failure clinic that serves patients in the region of Hull, England. The researchers identified 4,992 of these patients with confirmed heart failure and adequate data for their analyses, including 2,997 (60%) with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) and 1,995 (40%) with heart failure with normal ejection fraction (HFnEF, the term used by the authors but often called heart failure with preserved ejection fraction).

Thyroid hormone levels showed that 90% of these patients were euthyroid, 6% were hyperthyroid, and 4% were hypothyroid, rates consistent with prior reports for both the general population and heart failure patients. Only 12 patients (0.2%) had overt hypothyroidism, and fewer that 1% (about 45 patients) had overt hyperthyroidism. Patients averaged about 73 years of age, and during a median 4.6 years of follow-up 58% died.

Both the hypo- and hyperthyroid patients showed significantly higher mortality rates than euthyroid patients in a univariate analysis. But the patients with thyroid dysfunction also had more comorbidities, more severe heart failure symptoms measured by NYHA functional class, and more severe heart failure measured as higher serum levels of NT-proBNP.



In a multivariate analysis that adjusted for these factors, the significant differences disappeared among the entire group of heart failure patients for the outcomes of all-cause mortality, and mortality or hospitalization with heart failure. The multivariate analysis also showed no significant association between higher levels of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) and all-cause death or death plus heart failure hospitalization among the patients with HFrEF.

Among patients with HFnEF, the multivariate adjusted analysis showed a small increase in both mortality and mortality plus hospitalization for heart failure, a 2% rise for each of these two endpoints for each 1 mIU/L increase in TSH, the authors reported. Although the P value for each of these two significant differences among patients with HFnEF was .02, the 95% confidence interval included 1.00 and ranged from 1.00 to 1.04.

The multivariate analysis identified three variables with the strongest associations with all-cause mortality: older age, higher levels of NT-proBNP, and higher NYHA class indicating greater functional impairment.

The results support the hypothesis that “worsening heart failure can lead to down-regulation of thyroid hormone signaling,” the authors suggested. Their study is also “the first to examine the prognostic significance of thyroid dysfunction in a large population of patients with HFnEF.” This analysis showed a “weak but significant association between increasing TSH and both mortality and the composite endpoint in patients with HFnEF.”

“HFnEF is a heterogeneous group of conditions that are difficult to diagnose in many cases. Therefore, future studies are needed to provide further clarity on the effect of thyroid dysfunction in these patients,” Dr. Samuel said.

The study received no commercial funding. Dr. Samuel and Dr. Clark had no disclosures.

SOURCE: Samuel NA et al. Am J Cardiol. 2020 Oct 24. doi: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2020.10.034.

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PCI success vs. meds only in diabetes may depend on LDL-C control

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In order for percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) to shine, compared with meds alone in patients with type-2 diabetes and stable coronary disease (CAD), it needs help from aggressive control of LDL cholesterol (LDL-C) levels, suggests a patient-level meta-analysis of three major randomized trials.

Dr. Sripal Bangalore

Performing PCI in such patients with diabetes conferred further benefit over optimal medical therapy (OMT) for major adverse cardiac or cerebrovascular events (MACCE) only among those whose LDL-C levels had been pushed below the guidelines-specified threshold of 70 mg/dL within 1 year.

At that level of LDL-C control, PCI, compared with the meds-alone strategy, was followed by a nearly 40% drop in 4-year risk for the composite endpoint, which consisted of death from any cause or nonfatal myocardial infarction (MI) or stroke.

Also for patients reaching a 1-year LDL-C of <70 mg/dL, the risk of MACCE was similar for those who had been assigned to coronary bypass surgery (CABG), compared with PCI. But that risk was significantly lower for the CABG group among those reaching LDL-C levels above that threshold.

“The strategy of revascularization with the LDL lowering, that’s the combination that seems to be a winner” in such patients with diabetes and stable CAD, lead author Michael E. Farkouh, MD, MSc, said in an interview.

If their LDL-C “stays above 70 mg/dL, they don’t really enjoy any benefit of PCI. It’s a message to our interventional community to really drive that LDL down,” said Dr. Farkouh, of the University of Toronto. “Not only with statins, but perhaps with PCSK9 inhibitors, ezetimibe, and other therapies to lower that LDL-C.”

The analysis, published Nov. 2 in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, pooled more than 4,000 patients with diabetes and stable CAD randomized in the BARI 2DFREEDOM, and COURAGE trials.

The new study adds a twist to an ongoing theme throughout some meta-analyses and clinical trials like ISCHEMIA since the results of COURAGE were unveiled 13 years ago. The latter trial famously saw no significant difference in death, MI, or stroke in patients with stable CAD assigned to OMT with or without PCI. That set off years of controversy about the relative merits of the revascularization and meds-only strategies in stable CAD that persists today.

But, Dr. Farkouh proposed, whether PCI improves clinical outcomes, compared with meds alone, at least in patients with diabetes, may be tied to the success of LDL-C-lowering therapies in reaching that goal, which in the current study was below 70 mg/dL.

“In this analysis of pooled data from the three major trials, we demonstrate that attaining that level of LDL-C at 1 year portends a better outcome for PCI” in patients with diabetes and stable CAD, he said.

The findings “probably need to be studied further, but it is compelling to think that if we can drive the LDL-C down by one year after the procedure, we have better outcomes with PCI,” compared with a meds-only strategy in patients with diabetes and stable CAD. “That really vindicates a lot of those who believe in PCI,” Dr. Farkouh said.

“What’s surprising to me is, if the patient has an LDL less than 70, why is it that there is a benefit of PCI, compared to medical therapy alone? Because they’re already so aggressively managed, you would think there shouldn’t be a benefit,” Sripal Bangalore, MD, MHA, New York University, said in an interview. “For me, that part is difficult to understand.”

The finding somewhat contradicts the results of ISCHEMIA, in which OMT – including LDL-C-lowering therapy – was considered more aggressive than usually managed in practice, Bangalore said. Yet the trial saw no outcomes difference between PCI and the more conservative approach, leading some to speculate that PCI may be a better choice when, for whatever reason, medical therapy isn’t optimal.

The observed superiority of PCI over meds-only at the lowest LDL-C levels is, according to Dr. Banagalore, “more likely because of residual confounding, given the fact that they’re combining three different trials, which are aimed to address different sets of questions.” He was an investigator with the FREEDOM and ISCHEMIA trials but isn’t associated with the current report.

The main message from this observational analysis is that “of course, we want to get the LDL as low as possible in these patients with demonstrated cardiovascular disease and diabetes,” Donald M. Lloyd-Jones, MD, ScM, Northwestern University, Chicago, said in an interview. “Every one of these patients should be shooting for as low an LDL as possible.”

Regardless of revascularization strategy, he said, “we have to get people on a high-intensity statin, or at least their maximally targeted dose, and have a careful and thoughtful conversation about whether they need additional lowering with, perhaps, ezetimibe, if they’re not below the thresholds we’d like to see them at, in this case, 70 mg/dL.”

Still, the current findings that the relative effects of PCI and CABG in these patients may vary by degree of LDL-C reduction “are interesting, but would have to be tested a little bit more directly,” said Dr. Lloyd-Jones, who is not affiliated with the analysis.

An accompanying editorial, which also acknowledges the study’s limitations, says its results “are relevant for clinical practice and may pave the way toward the generation of novel personalized medicine models that can optimize care of patients with type-2 diabetes.” 

They “support the concept of an individualized treatment strategy that accounts for a patient’s LDL-C level to estimate clinical outcomes and expected treatment effects after therapeutic interventions,” say the authors, led by Eliano P. Navarese, MD, PhD, Nicolaus Copernicus University, Bydgoszcz, Poland.

“For daily practice, these results also underscore the importance of follow-up LDL-C measurements, both as a risk stratifier and as an indicator for therapy adjustments,” they write, noting that “current guidelines provide no formal recommendation on when to check LDL-C after PCI.”

The meta-analysis followed a total of 4050 patients with diabetes and stable CAD from the three randomized trials, those with evaluable baseline and follow-up LDL-C measurements, for a median of 4 years after the 1-year LDL-C assessment. At that time, at least 90% of patients in each of the trials had statin prescriptions, the group reported.

At one year, 34.5% of the total cohort had an LDL-C <70 mg/dL; their mean was 55.8 mg/dL.

And 42.2% had an LDL-C from 70 mg/dL to <100 mg/dL; their mean was 83.4 mg/dL. Compared with patients with an LDL-C <70 mg/dL, their adjusted hazard ratio for the composite endpoint was not elevated at 1.07 (95% CI, 0.86-1.32, P = .54).

Finally, 23.2% had an LDL-C ≥100 mg/dL; the mean was 123.0 mg/dL. Compared with the group with the lowest 1-year LDL-C, their adjusted HR for MACCE was increased at 1.46 (95% CI, 1.15 - 1.85, P = .002).

That HR among the 42.3% of patients in the PCI cohort, compared with the 33.3% assigned to meds only, climbed significantly only among those in the lowest 1-year LDL-C stratum: HR, 0.61 (95% CI, 0.40-0.91, P = .016). Corresponding HRs in the mid-range and highest 1-year LDL strata were close to unity and nonsignificant at P = .71 and P = .98, respectively.

On the other hand, the 24.4% of patients assigned to CABG showed better MACCE outcomes than those in the meds-only group across all three 1-year LDL-C strata.

The risk of MACCE wasn’t significantly altered by CABG, compared with PCI among patients achieving a 1-year LDL-C less than 70 mg/dL. However, it fell by about one-half for CABG vs. PCI in both the mid-range and highest 1-year LDL-C strata, P = .003 and P = .022, respectively.

Dr. Bangalore said he’s entirely behind the results of the study’s comparison of PCI and CABG. “It’s exactly the hypothesis that I’ve been putting forward, that if you want to achieve results as good as CABG, do PCI with aggressive medical therapy.” That means second-generation drug-eluting stents for the target lesions, “and aggressive medical therapy to address all of the nontarget lesions, specifically in diabetics.”

It’s possible, Dr. Lloyd-Jones said, that there is “no longer a dichotomy between revascularization strategies,” with respect to clinical outcomes, in such patients who maintain an LDL less than 70 mg/dL, as the study suggests.

“But I wonder, if it had continued for another 4 years of follow-up, whether we would see the CABG patients start to have more events,” such that the CABG advantage goes away at higher LDL-C levels, he proposed.

Or, Dr. Lloyd-Jones speculated, if all patients had achieved LDL-C below 70 mg/dL, “would there be such a difference between the PCI and CABG groups? My bet would be that it would be small or abolished.”

Dr. Farkouh discloses receiving research grants from Amgen, Novo Nordisk, and Novartis. Disclosures for the other study authors can be found with the original article. Editorialist Dr. Navarese discloses receiving consulting fees or honoraria from Abbott, AstraZeneca, Amgen, Bayer, Sanofi, and Pfizer; and grants from Abbott and Amgen. Dr. Lloyd-Jones has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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In order for percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) to shine, compared with meds alone in patients with type-2 diabetes and stable coronary disease (CAD), it needs help from aggressive control of LDL cholesterol (LDL-C) levels, suggests a patient-level meta-analysis of three major randomized trials.

Dr. Sripal Bangalore

Performing PCI in such patients with diabetes conferred further benefit over optimal medical therapy (OMT) for major adverse cardiac or cerebrovascular events (MACCE) only among those whose LDL-C levels had been pushed below the guidelines-specified threshold of 70 mg/dL within 1 year.

At that level of LDL-C control, PCI, compared with the meds-alone strategy, was followed by a nearly 40% drop in 4-year risk for the composite endpoint, which consisted of death from any cause or nonfatal myocardial infarction (MI) or stroke.

Also for patients reaching a 1-year LDL-C of <70 mg/dL, the risk of MACCE was similar for those who had been assigned to coronary bypass surgery (CABG), compared with PCI. But that risk was significantly lower for the CABG group among those reaching LDL-C levels above that threshold.

“The strategy of revascularization with the LDL lowering, that’s the combination that seems to be a winner” in such patients with diabetes and stable CAD, lead author Michael E. Farkouh, MD, MSc, said in an interview.

If their LDL-C “stays above 70 mg/dL, they don’t really enjoy any benefit of PCI. It’s a message to our interventional community to really drive that LDL down,” said Dr. Farkouh, of the University of Toronto. “Not only with statins, but perhaps with PCSK9 inhibitors, ezetimibe, and other therapies to lower that LDL-C.”

The analysis, published Nov. 2 in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, pooled more than 4,000 patients with diabetes and stable CAD randomized in the BARI 2DFREEDOM, and COURAGE trials.

The new study adds a twist to an ongoing theme throughout some meta-analyses and clinical trials like ISCHEMIA since the results of COURAGE were unveiled 13 years ago. The latter trial famously saw no significant difference in death, MI, or stroke in patients with stable CAD assigned to OMT with or without PCI. That set off years of controversy about the relative merits of the revascularization and meds-only strategies in stable CAD that persists today.

But, Dr. Farkouh proposed, whether PCI improves clinical outcomes, compared with meds alone, at least in patients with diabetes, may be tied to the success of LDL-C-lowering therapies in reaching that goal, which in the current study was below 70 mg/dL.

“In this analysis of pooled data from the three major trials, we demonstrate that attaining that level of LDL-C at 1 year portends a better outcome for PCI” in patients with diabetes and stable CAD, he said.

The findings “probably need to be studied further, but it is compelling to think that if we can drive the LDL-C down by one year after the procedure, we have better outcomes with PCI,” compared with a meds-only strategy in patients with diabetes and stable CAD. “That really vindicates a lot of those who believe in PCI,” Dr. Farkouh said.

“What’s surprising to me is, if the patient has an LDL less than 70, why is it that there is a benefit of PCI, compared to medical therapy alone? Because they’re already so aggressively managed, you would think there shouldn’t be a benefit,” Sripal Bangalore, MD, MHA, New York University, said in an interview. “For me, that part is difficult to understand.”

The finding somewhat contradicts the results of ISCHEMIA, in which OMT – including LDL-C-lowering therapy – was considered more aggressive than usually managed in practice, Bangalore said. Yet the trial saw no outcomes difference between PCI and the more conservative approach, leading some to speculate that PCI may be a better choice when, for whatever reason, medical therapy isn’t optimal.

The observed superiority of PCI over meds-only at the lowest LDL-C levels is, according to Dr. Banagalore, “more likely because of residual confounding, given the fact that they’re combining three different trials, which are aimed to address different sets of questions.” He was an investigator with the FREEDOM and ISCHEMIA trials but isn’t associated with the current report.

The main message from this observational analysis is that “of course, we want to get the LDL as low as possible in these patients with demonstrated cardiovascular disease and diabetes,” Donald M. Lloyd-Jones, MD, ScM, Northwestern University, Chicago, said in an interview. “Every one of these patients should be shooting for as low an LDL as possible.”

Regardless of revascularization strategy, he said, “we have to get people on a high-intensity statin, or at least their maximally targeted dose, and have a careful and thoughtful conversation about whether they need additional lowering with, perhaps, ezetimibe, if they’re not below the thresholds we’d like to see them at, in this case, 70 mg/dL.”

Still, the current findings that the relative effects of PCI and CABG in these patients may vary by degree of LDL-C reduction “are interesting, but would have to be tested a little bit more directly,” said Dr. Lloyd-Jones, who is not affiliated with the analysis.

An accompanying editorial, which also acknowledges the study’s limitations, says its results “are relevant for clinical practice and may pave the way toward the generation of novel personalized medicine models that can optimize care of patients with type-2 diabetes.” 

They “support the concept of an individualized treatment strategy that accounts for a patient’s LDL-C level to estimate clinical outcomes and expected treatment effects after therapeutic interventions,” say the authors, led by Eliano P. Navarese, MD, PhD, Nicolaus Copernicus University, Bydgoszcz, Poland.

“For daily practice, these results also underscore the importance of follow-up LDL-C measurements, both as a risk stratifier and as an indicator for therapy adjustments,” they write, noting that “current guidelines provide no formal recommendation on when to check LDL-C after PCI.”

The meta-analysis followed a total of 4050 patients with diabetes and stable CAD from the three randomized trials, those with evaluable baseline and follow-up LDL-C measurements, for a median of 4 years after the 1-year LDL-C assessment. At that time, at least 90% of patients in each of the trials had statin prescriptions, the group reported.

At one year, 34.5% of the total cohort had an LDL-C <70 mg/dL; their mean was 55.8 mg/dL.

And 42.2% had an LDL-C from 70 mg/dL to <100 mg/dL; their mean was 83.4 mg/dL. Compared with patients with an LDL-C <70 mg/dL, their adjusted hazard ratio for the composite endpoint was not elevated at 1.07 (95% CI, 0.86-1.32, P = .54).

Finally, 23.2% had an LDL-C ≥100 mg/dL; the mean was 123.0 mg/dL. Compared with the group with the lowest 1-year LDL-C, their adjusted HR for MACCE was increased at 1.46 (95% CI, 1.15 - 1.85, P = .002).

That HR among the 42.3% of patients in the PCI cohort, compared with the 33.3% assigned to meds only, climbed significantly only among those in the lowest 1-year LDL-C stratum: HR, 0.61 (95% CI, 0.40-0.91, P = .016). Corresponding HRs in the mid-range and highest 1-year LDL strata were close to unity and nonsignificant at P = .71 and P = .98, respectively.

On the other hand, the 24.4% of patients assigned to CABG showed better MACCE outcomes than those in the meds-only group across all three 1-year LDL-C strata.

The risk of MACCE wasn’t significantly altered by CABG, compared with PCI among patients achieving a 1-year LDL-C less than 70 mg/dL. However, it fell by about one-half for CABG vs. PCI in both the mid-range and highest 1-year LDL-C strata, P = .003 and P = .022, respectively.

Dr. Bangalore said he’s entirely behind the results of the study’s comparison of PCI and CABG. “It’s exactly the hypothesis that I’ve been putting forward, that if you want to achieve results as good as CABG, do PCI with aggressive medical therapy.” That means second-generation drug-eluting stents for the target lesions, “and aggressive medical therapy to address all of the nontarget lesions, specifically in diabetics.”

It’s possible, Dr. Lloyd-Jones said, that there is “no longer a dichotomy between revascularization strategies,” with respect to clinical outcomes, in such patients who maintain an LDL less than 70 mg/dL, as the study suggests.

“But I wonder, if it had continued for another 4 years of follow-up, whether we would see the CABG patients start to have more events,” such that the CABG advantage goes away at higher LDL-C levels, he proposed.

Or, Dr. Lloyd-Jones speculated, if all patients had achieved LDL-C below 70 mg/dL, “would there be such a difference between the PCI and CABG groups? My bet would be that it would be small or abolished.”

Dr. Farkouh discloses receiving research grants from Amgen, Novo Nordisk, and Novartis. Disclosures for the other study authors can be found with the original article. Editorialist Dr. Navarese discloses receiving consulting fees or honoraria from Abbott, AstraZeneca, Amgen, Bayer, Sanofi, and Pfizer; and grants from Abbott and Amgen. Dr. Lloyd-Jones has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

In order for percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) to shine, compared with meds alone in patients with type-2 diabetes and stable coronary disease (CAD), it needs help from aggressive control of LDL cholesterol (LDL-C) levels, suggests a patient-level meta-analysis of three major randomized trials.

Dr. Sripal Bangalore

Performing PCI in such patients with diabetes conferred further benefit over optimal medical therapy (OMT) for major adverse cardiac or cerebrovascular events (MACCE) only among those whose LDL-C levels had been pushed below the guidelines-specified threshold of 70 mg/dL within 1 year.

At that level of LDL-C control, PCI, compared with the meds-alone strategy, was followed by a nearly 40% drop in 4-year risk for the composite endpoint, which consisted of death from any cause or nonfatal myocardial infarction (MI) or stroke.

Also for patients reaching a 1-year LDL-C of <70 mg/dL, the risk of MACCE was similar for those who had been assigned to coronary bypass surgery (CABG), compared with PCI. But that risk was significantly lower for the CABG group among those reaching LDL-C levels above that threshold.

“The strategy of revascularization with the LDL lowering, that’s the combination that seems to be a winner” in such patients with diabetes and stable CAD, lead author Michael E. Farkouh, MD, MSc, said in an interview.

If their LDL-C “stays above 70 mg/dL, they don’t really enjoy any benefit of PCI. It’s a message to our interventional community to really drive that LDL down,” said Dr. Farkouh, of the University of Toronto. “Not only with statins, but perhaps with PCSK9 inhibitors, ezetimibe, and other therapies to lower that LDL-C.”

The analysis, published Nov. 2 in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, pooled more than 4,000 patients with diabetes and stable CAD randomized in the BARI 2DFREEDOM, and COURAGE trials.

The new study adds a twist to an ongoing theme throughout some meta-analyses and clinical trials like ISCHEMIA since the results of COURAGE were unveiled 13 years ago. The latter trial famously saw no significant difference in death, MI, or stroke in patients with stable CAD assigned to OMT with or without PCI. That set off years of controversy about the relative merits of the revascularization and meds-only strategies in stable CAD that persists today.

But, Dr. Farkouh proposed, whether PCI improves clinical outcomes, compared with meds alone, at least in patients with diabetes, may be tied to the success of LDL-C-lowering therapies in reaching that goal, which in the current study was below 70 mg/dL.

“In this analysis of pooled data from the three major trials, we demonstrate that attaining that level of LDL-C at 1 year portends a better outcome for PCI” in patients with diabetes and stable CAD, he said.

The findings “probably need to be studied further, but it is compelling to think that if we can drive the LDL-C down by one year after the procedure, we have better outcomes with PCI,” compared with a meds-only strategy in patients with diabetes and stable CAD. “That really vindicates a lot of those who believe in PCI,” Dr. Farkouh said.

“What’s surprising to me is, if the patient has an LDL less than 70, why is it that there is a benefit of PCI, compared to medical therapy alone? Because they’re already so aggressively managed, you would think there shouldn’t be a benefit,” Sripal Bangalore, MD, MHA, New York University, said in an interview. “For me, that part is difficult to understand.”

The finding somewhat contradicts the results of ISCHEMIA, in which OMT – including LDL-C-lowering therapy – was considered more aggressive than usually managed in practice, Bangalore said. Yet the trial saw no outcomes difference between PCI and the more conservative approach, leading some to speculate that PCI may be a better choice when, for whatever reason, medical therapy isn’t optimal.

The observed superiority of PCI over meds-only at the lowest LDL-C levels is, according to Dr. Banagalore, “more likely because of residual confounding, given the fact that they’re combining three different trials, which are aimed to address different sets of questions.” He was an investigator with the FREEDOM and ISCHEMIA trials but isn’t associated with the current report.

The main message from this observational analysis is that “of course, we want to get the LDL as low as possible in these patients with demonstrated cardiovascular disease and diabetes,” Donald M. Lloyd-Jones, MD, ScM, Northwestern University, Chicago, said in an interview. “Every one of these patients should be shooting for as low an LDL as possible.”

Regardless of revascularization strategy, he said, “we have to get people on a high-intensity statin, or at least their maximally targeted dose, and have a careful and thoughtful conversation about whether they need additional lowering with, perhaps, ezetimibe, if they’re not below the thresholds we’d like to see them at, in this case, 70 mg/dL.”

Still, the current findings that the relative effects of PCI and CABG in these patients may vary by degree of LDL-C reduction “are interesting, but would have to be tested a little bit more directly,” said Dr. Lloyd-Jones, who is not affiliated with the analysis.

An accompanying editorial, which also acknowledges the study’s limitations, says its results “are relevant for clinical practice and may pave the way toward the generation of novel personalized medicine models that can optimize care of patients with type-2 diabetes.” 

They “support the concept of an individualized treatment strategy that accounts for a patient’s LDL-C level to estimate clinical outcomes and expected treatment effects after therapeutic interventions,” say the authors, led by Eliano P. Navarese, MD, PhD, Nicolaus Copernicus University, Bydgoszcz, Poland.

“For daily practice, these results also underscore the importance of follow-up LDL-C measurements, both as a risk stratifier and as an indicator for therapy adjustments,” they write, noting that “current guidelines provide no formal recommendation on when to check LDL-C after PCI.”

The meta-analysis followed a total of 4050 patients with diabetes and stable CAD from the three randomized trials, those with evaluable baseline and follow-up LDL-C measurements, for a median of 4 years after the 1-year LDL-C assessment. At that time, at least 90% of patients in each of the trials had statin prescriptions, the group reported.

At one year, 34.5% of the total cohort had an LDL-C <70 mg/dL; their mean was 55.8 mg/dL.

And 42.2% had an LDL-C from 70 mg/dL to <100 mg/dL; their mean was 83.4 mg/dL. Compared with patients with an LDL-C <70 mg/dL, their adjusted hazard ratio for the composite endpoint was not elevated at 1.07 (95% CI, 0.86-1.32, P = .54).

Finally, 23.2% had an LDL-C ≥100 mg/dL; the mean was 123.0 mg/dL. Compared with the group with the lowest 1-year LDL-C, their adjusted HR for MACCE was increased at 1.46 (95% CI, 1.15 - 1.85, P = .002).

That HR among the 42.3% of patients in the PCI cohort, compared with the 33.3% assigned to meds only, climbed significantly only among those in the lowest 1-year LDL-C stratum: HR, 0.61 (95% CI, 0.40-0.91, P = .016). Corresponding HRs in the mid-range and highest 1-year LDL strata were close to unity and nonsignificant at P = .71 and P = .98, respectively.

On the other hand, the 24.4% of patients assigned to CABG showed better MACCE outcomes than those in the meds-only group across all three 1-year LDL-C strata.

The risk of MACCE wasn’t significantly altered by CABG, compared with PCI among patients achieving a 1-year LDL-C less than 70 mg/dL. However, it fell by about one-half for CABG vs. PCI in both the mid-range and highest 1-year LDL-C strata, P = .003 and P = .022, respectively.

Dr. Bangalore said he’s entirely behind the results of the study’s comparison of PCI and CABG. “It’s exactly the hypothesis that I’ve been putting forward, that if you want to achieve results as good as CABG, do PCI with aggressive medical therapy.” That means second-generation drug-eluting stents for the target lesions, “and aggressive medical therapy to address all of the nontarget lesions, specifically in diabetics.”

It’s possible, Dr. Lloyd-Jones said, that there is “no longer a dichotomy between revascularization strategies,” with respect to clinical outcomes, in such patients who maintain an LDL less than 70 mg/dL, as the study suggests.

“But I wonder, if it had continued for another 4 years of follow-up, whether we would see the CABG patients start to have more events,” such that the CABG advantage goes away at higher LDL-C levels, he proposed.

Or, Dr. Lloyd-Jones speculated, if all patients had achieved LDL-C below 70 mg/dL, “would there be such a difference between the PCI and CABG groups? My bet would be that it would be small or abolished.”

Dr. Farkouh discloses receiving research grants from Amgen, Novo Nordisk, and Novartis. Disclosures for the other study authors can be found with the original article. Editorialist Dr. Navarese discloses receiving consulting fees or honoraria from Abbott, AstraZeneca, Amgen, Bayer, Sanofi, and Pfizer; and grants from Abbott and Amgen. Dr. Lloyd-Jones has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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First-of-its kind guideline on lipid monitoring in endocrine diseases

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Endocrine diseases of any type – not just diabetes – can represent a cardiovascular risk and patients with those disorders should be screened for high cholesterol, according to a new clinical practice guideline from the Endocrine Society.

“The simple recommendation to check a lipid panel in patients with endocrine diseases and calculate cardiovascular risk may be practice changing because that is not done routinely,” Connie Newman, MD, chair of the Endocrine Society committee that developed the guideline, said in an interview.

“Usually the focus is on assessment and treatment of the endocrine disease, rather than on assessment and treatment of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk,” said Newman, an adjunct professor of medicine in the department of medicine, division of endocrinology, diabetes & metabolism, at New York University.

Whereas diabetes, well-known for its increased cardiovascular risk profile, is commonly addressed in other cardiovascular and cholesterol practice management guidelines, the array of other endocrine diseases are not typically included.

“This guideline is the first of its kind,” Dr. Newman said. “The Endocrine Society has not previously issued a guideline on lipid management in endocrine disorders [and] other organizations have not written guidelines on this topic. 

“Rather, guidelines have been written on cholesterol management, but these do not describe cholesterol management in patients with endocrine diseases such as thyroid disease [hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism], Cushing’s syndrome, acromegaly, growth hormone deficiency, menopause, male hypogonadism, and obesity,” she noted.

But these conditions carry a host of cardiovascular risk factors that may require careful monitoring and management.

“Although endocrine hormones, such as thyroid hormone, cortisol, estrogen, testosterone, growth hormone, and insulin, affect pathways for lipid metabolism, physicians lack guidance on lipid abnormalities, cardiovascular risk, and treatment to reduce lipids and cardiovascular risk in patients with endocrine diseases,” she explained.

Vinaya Simha, MD, an internal medicine specialist at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., agrees that the guideline is notable in addressing an unmet need.

Recommendations that stand out to Dr. Simha include the suggestion of adding eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) ethyl ester to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease in adults with diabetes or atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease who have elevated triglyceride levels despite statin treatment.

James L. Rosenzweig, MD, an endocrinologist at Hebrew SeniorLife in Boston, agreed that this is an important addition to an area that needs more guidance.

“Many of these clinical situations can exacerbate dyslipidemia and some also increase the cardiovascular risk to a greater extent in combination with elevated cholesterol and/or triglycerides,” he said in an interview. 

“In many cases, treatment of the underlying disorder appropriately can have an important impact in resolving the lipid disorder. In others, more aggressive pharmacological treatment is indicated,” he said.

“I think that this will be a valuable resource, especially for endocrinologists, but it can be used as well by providers in other disciplines.”
 

Key recommendations for different endocrine conditions

The guideline, published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, details those risks and provides evidence-based recommendations on their management and treatment.

Key recommendations include:

  • Obtain a lipid panel and evaluate cardiovascular risk factors in all adults with endocrine disorders.
  • In patients with  and risk factors for cardiovascular disease, start statin therapy in addition to lifestyle modification to reduce cardiovascular risk. “This could mean earlier treatment because other guidelines recommend consideration of therapy at age 40,” Dr. Newman said.
  • Statin therapy is also recommended for adults over 40 with  with a duration of diabetes of more than 20 years and/or microvascular complications, regardless of their cardiovascular risk score. “This means earlier treatment of patients with type 1 diabetes with statins in order to reduce cardiovascular disease risk,” Dr. Newman noted.
  • In patients with hyperlipidemia, rule out  as the cause before treating with lipid-lowering medications. And among patients who are found to have hypothyroidism, reevaluate the lipid profile when the patient has thyroid hormone levels in the normal range.
  • Adults with persistent endogenous Cushing’s syndrome should have their lipid profile monitored. Statin therapy should be considered in addition to lifestyle modifications, irrespective of the cardiovascular risk score.
  • In postmenopausal women, high cholesterol or triglycerides should be treated with statins rather than hormone therapy.
  • Evaluate and treat lipids and other cardiovascular risk factors in women who enter menopause early (before the age of 40-45 years).
 

 

Nice summary of ‘risk-enhancing’ endocrine disorders

Dr. Simha said in an interview that the new guideline is “probably the first comprehensive statement addressing lipid treatment in patients with a broad range of endocrine disorders besides diabetes.”

“Most of the treatment recommendations are congruent with other current guidelines such as the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association [guidelines], but there is specific mention of which endocrine disorders represent enhanced cardiovascular risk,” she explained.

The new recommendations are notable for including “a nice summary of how different endocrine disorders affect lipid values, and also which endocrine disorders need to be considered as ‘risk-enhancing factors,’ ” Dr. Simha noted.

“The use of EPA in patients with hypertriglyceridemia is novel, compared to the ACC/AHA recommendation. This reflects new data which is now available,” she added.

The American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists also just issued a new algorithm on lipid management and prevention of cardiovascular disease in which treatment of hypertriglyceridemia is emphasized.

In addition, the new Endocrine Society guideline “also mentions an LDL [cholesterol] treatment threshold of 70 mg/dL, and 55 mg/dL in some patient categories, which previous guidelines have not,” Dr. Simha noted.

Overall, Dr. Newman added that the goal of the guideline is to increase awareness of key issues with endocrine diseases that may not necessarily be on clinicians’ radars.

“We hope that it will make a lipid panel and cardiovascular risk evaluation routine in adults with endocrine diseases and cause a greater focus on therapies to reduce heart disease and stroke,” she said.

Dr. Newman, Dr. Simha, and Dr. Rosenzweig reported no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

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Endocrine diseases of any type – not just diabetes – can represent a cardiovascular risk and patients with those disorders should be screened for high cholesterol, according to a new clinical practice guideline from the Endocrine Society.

“The simple recommendation to check a lipid panel in patients with endocrine diseases and calculate cardiovascular risk may be practice changing because that is not done routinely,” Connie Newman, MD, chair of the Endocrine Society committee that developed the guideline, said in an interview.

“Usually the focus is on assessment and treatment of the endocrine disease, rather than on assessment and treatment of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk,” said Newman, an adjunct professor of medicine in the department of medicine, division of endocrinology, diabetes & metabolism, at New York University.

Whereas diabetes, well-known for its increased cardiovascular risk profile, is commonly addressed in other cardiovascular and cholesterol practice management guidelines, the array of other endocrine diseases are not typically included.

“This guideline is the first of its kind,” Dr. Newman said. “The Endocrine Society has not previously issued a guideline on lipid management in endocrine disorders [and] other organizations have not written guidelines on this topic. 

“Rather, guidelines have been written on cholesterol management, but these do not describe cholesterol management in patients with endocrine diseases such as thyroid disease [hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism], Cushing’s syndrome, acromegaly, growth hormone deficiency, menopause, male hypogonadism, and obesity,” she noted.

But these conditions carry a host of cardiovascular risk factors that may require careful monitoring and management.

“Although endocrine hormones, such as thyroid hormone, cortisol, estrogen, testosterone, growth hormone, and insulin, affect pathways for lipid metabolism, physicians lack guidance on lipid abnormalities, cardiovascular risk, and treatment to reduce lipids and cardiovascular risk in patients with endocrine diseases,” she explained.

Vinaya Simha, MD, an internal medicine specialist at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., agrees that the guideline is notable in addressing an unmet need.

Recommendations that stand out to Dr. Simha include the suggestion of adding eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) ethyl ester to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease in adults with diabetes or atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease who have elevated triglyceride levels despite statin treatment.

James L. Rosenzweig, MD, an endocrinologist at Hebrew SeniorLife in Boston, agreed that this is an important addition to an area that needs more guidance.

“Many of these clinical situations can exacerbate dyslipidemia and some also increase the cardiovascular risk to a greater extent in combination with elevated cholesterol and/or triglycerides,” he said in an interview. 

“In many cases, treatment of the underlying disorder appropriately can have an important impact in resolving the lipid disorder. In others, more aggressive pharmacological treatment is indicated,” he said.

“I think that this will be a valuable resource, especially for endocrinologists, but it can be used as well by providers in other disciplines.”
 

Key recommendations for different endocrine conditions

The guideline, published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, details those risks and provides evidence-based recommendations on their management and treatment.

Key recommendations include:

  • Obtain a lipid panel and evaluate cardiovascular risk factors in all adults with endocrine disorders.
  • In patients with  and risk factors for cardiovascular disease, start statin therapy in addition to lifestyle modification to reduce cardiovascular risk. “This could mean earlier treatment because other guidelines recommend consideration of therapy at age 40,” Dr. Newman said.
  • Statin therapy is also recommended for adults over 40 with  with a duration of diabetes of more than 20 years and/or microvascular complications, regardless of their cardiovascular risk score. “This means earlier treatment of patients with type 1 diabetes with statins in order to reduce cardiovascular disease risk,” Dr. Newman noted.
  • In patients with hyperlipidemia, rule out  as the cause before treating with lipid-lowering medications. And among patients who are found to have hypothyroidism, reevaluate the lipid profile when the patient has thyroid hormone levels in the normal range.
  • Adults with persistent endogenous Cushing’s syndrome should have their lipid profile monitored. Statin therapy should be considered in addition to lifestyle modifications, irrespective of the cardiovascular risk score.
  • In postmenopausal women, high cholesterol or triglycerides should be treated with statins rather than hormone therapy.
  • Evaluate and treat lipids and other cardiovascular risk factors in women who enter menopause early (before the age of 40-45 years).
 

 

Nice summary of ‘risk-enhancing’ endocrine disorders

Dr. Simha said in an interview that the new guideline is “probably the first comprehensive statement addressing lipid treatment in patients with a broad range of endocrine disorders besides diabetes.”

“Most of the treatment recommendations are congruent with other current guidelines such as the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association [guidelines], but there is specific mention of which endocrine disorders represent enhanced cardiovascular risk,” she explained.

The new recommendations are notable for including “a nice summary of how different endocrine disorders affect lipid values, and also which endocrine disorders need to be considered as ‘risk-enhancing factors,’ ” Dr. Simha noted.

“The use of EPA in patients with hypertriglyceridemia is novel, compared to the ACC/AHA recommendation. This reflects new data which is now available,” she added.

The American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists also just issued a new algorithm on lipid management and prevention of cardiovascular disease in which treatment of hypertriglyceridemia is emphasized.

In addition, the new Endocrine Society guideline “also mentions an LDL [cholesterol] treatment threshold of 70 mg/dL, and 55 mg/dL in some patient categories, which previous guidelines have not,” Dr. Simha noted.

Overall, Dr. Newman added that the goal of the guideline is to increase awareness of key issues with endocrine diseases that may not necessarily be on clinicians’ radars.

“We hope that it will make a lipid panel and cardiovascular risk evaluation routine in adults with endocrine diseases and cause a greater focus on therapies to reduce heart disease and stroke,” she said.

Dr. Newman, Dr. Simha, and Dr. Rosenzweig reported no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

Endocrine diseases of any type – not just diabetes – can represent a cardiovascular risk and patients with those disorders should be screened for high cholesterol, according to a new clinical practice guideline from the Endocrine Society.

“The simple recommendation to check a lipid panel in patients with endocrine diseases and calculate cardiovascular risk may be practice changing because that is not done routinely,” Connie Newman, MD, chair of the Endocrine Society committee that developed the guideline, said in an interview.

“Usually the focus is on assessment and treatment of the endocrine disease, rather than on assessment and treatment of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk,” said Newman, an adjunct professor of medicine in the department of medicine, division of endocrinology, diabetes & metabolism, at New York University.

Whereas diabetes, well-known for its increased cardiovascular risk profile, is commonly addressed in other cardiovascular and cholesterol practice management guidelines, the array of other endocrine diseases are not typically included.

“This guideline is the first of its kind,” Dr. Newman said. “The Endocrine Society has not previously issued a guideline on lipid management in endocrine disorders [and] other organizations have not written guidelines on this topic. 

“Rather, guidelines have been written on cholesterol management, but these do not describe cholesterol management in patients with endocrine diseases such as thyroid disease [hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism], Cushing’s syndrome, acromegaly, growth hormone deficiency, menopause, male hypogonadism, and obesity,” she noted.

But these conditions carry a host of cardiovascular risk factors that may require careful monitoring and management.

“Although endocrine hormones, such as thyroid hormone, cortisol, estrogen, testosterone, growth hormone, and insulin, affect pathways for lipid metabolism, physicians lack guidance on lipid abnormalities, cardiovascular risk, and treatment to reduce lipids and cardiovascular risk in patients with endocrine diseases,” she explained.

Vinaya Simha, MD, an internal medicine specialist at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., agrees that the guideline is notable in addressing an unmet need.

Recommendations that stand out to Dr. Simha include the suggestion of adding eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) ethyl ester to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease in adults with diabetes or atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease who have elevated triglyceride levels despite statin treatment.

James L. Rosenzweig, MD, an endocrinologist at Hebrew SeniorLife in Boston, agreed that this is an important addition to an area that needs more guidance.

“Many of these clinical situations can exacerbate dyslipidemia and some also increase the cardiovascular risk to a greater extent in combination with elevated cholesterol and/or triglycerides,” he said in an interview. 

“In many cases, treatment of the underlying disorder appropriately can have an important impact in resolving the lipid disorder. In others, more aggressive pharmacological treatment is indicated,” he said.

“I think that this will be a valuable resource, especially for endocrinologists, but it can be used as well by providers in other disciplines.”
 

Key recommendations for different endocrine conditions

The guideline, published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, details those risks and provides evidence-based recommendations on their management and treatment.

Key recommendations include:

  • Obtain a lipid panel and evaluate cardiovascular risk factors in all adults with endocrine disorders.
  • In patients with  and risk factors for cardiovascular disease, start statin therapy in addition to lifestyle modification to reduce cardiovascular risk. “This could mean earlier treatment because other guidelines recommend consideration of therapy at age 40,” Dr. Newman said.
  • Statin therapy is also recommended for adults over 40 with  with a duration of diabetes of more than 20 years and/or microvascular complications, regardless of their cardiovascular risk score. “This means earlier treatment of patients with type 1 diabetes with statins in order to reduce cardiovascular disease risk,” Dr. Newman noted.
  • In patients with hyperlipidemia, rule out  as the cause before treating with lipid-lowering medications. And among patients who are found to have hypothyroidism, reevaluate the lipid profile when the patient has thyroid hormone levels in the normal range.
  • Adults with persistent endogenous Cushing’s syndrome should have their lipid profile monitored. Statin therapy should be considered in addition to lifestyle modifications, irrespective of the cardiovascular risk score.
  • In postmenopausal women, high cholesterol or triglycerides should be treated with statins rather than hormone therapy.
  • Evaluate and treat lipids and other cardiovascular risk factors in women who enter menopause early (before the age of 40-45 years).
 

 

Nice summary of ‘risk-enhancing’ endocrine disorders

Dr. Simha said in an interview that the new guideline is “probably the first comprehensive statement addressing lipid treatment in patients with a broad range of endocrine disorders besides diabetes.”

“Most of the treatment recommendations are congruent with other current guidelines such as the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association [guidelines], but there is specific mention of which endocrine disorders represent enhanced cardiovascular risk,” she explained.

The new recommendations are notable for including “a nice summary of how different endocrine disorders affect lipid values, and also which endocrine disorders need to be considered as ‘risk-enhancing factors,’ ” Dr. Simha noted.

“The use of EPA in patients with hypertriglyceridemia is novel, compared to the ACC/AHA recommendation. This reflects new data which is now available,” she added.

The American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists also just issued a new algorithm on lipid management and prevention of cardiovascular disease in which treatment of hypertriglyceridemia is emphasized.

In addition, the new Endocrine Society guideline “also mentions an LDL [cholesterol] treatment threshold of 70 mg/dL, and 55 mg/dL in some patient categories, which previous guidelines have not,” Dr. Simha noted.

Overall, Dr. Newman added that the goal of the guideline is to increase awareness of key issues with endocrine diseases that may not necessarily be on clinicians’ radars.

“We hope that it will make a lipid panel and cardiovascular risk evaluation routine in adults with endocrine diseases and cause a greater focus on therapies to reduce heart disease and stroke,” she said.

Dr. Newman, Dr. Simha, and Dr. Rosenzweig reported no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

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FIT unfit for inpatient, emergency settings

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Most fecal immunochemical tests (FIT) in the hospital setting or the ED are performed for inappropriate indications, according to new data.

“This is the largest study that focuses exclusively on the use of FIT in the ED, inpatient wards, and in the ICU, and it shows significant misuse,” said investigator Umer Bhatti, MD, from Indiana University, Indianapolis.

The only “validated indication” for FIT is to screen for colorectal cancer. However, “99.5% of the FIT tests done in our study were for inappropriate indications,” he reported at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology, where the study was honored with an ACG Presidential Poster Award.

And the inappropriate use of FIT in these settings had no positive effect on clinical decision-making, he added.

For their study, Dr. Bhatti and colleagues looked at all instances of FIT use in their hospital’s electronic medical records from November 2017 to October 2019 to assess how often FIT was being used, the indications for which it was being used, and the impact of its use on clinical care.

They identified 550 patients, 48% of whom were women, who underwent at least one FIT test. Mean age of the study cohort was 54 years. Only three of the tests, or 0.5%, were performed to screen for colorectal cancer (95% confidence interval, 0.09%-1.52%).

Among the indications documented for FIT were anemia in 242 (44.0%) patients, suspected GI bleeding in 225 (40.9%), abdominal pain in 31 (5.6%), and change in bowel habits in 19 (3.5%).

The tests were performed most often in the ED (45.3%) and on the hospital floor (42.2%), but were also performed in the ICU (10.5%) and burn unit (2.0%).

Overall, 297 of the tests, or 54%, were negative, and 253, or 46%, were positive.

“GI consults were obtained in 46.2% of the FIT-positive group, compared with 13.1% of the FIT-negative patients” (odds ratio, 5.93; 95% CI, 3.88-9.04, P < .0001), Dr. Bhatti reported.

Among FIT-positive patients, those with overt bleeding were more likely to receive a GI consultation than those without (OR, 3.3; 95% CI, 1.9-5.5; P < .0001).

Of the 117 FIT-positive patients who underwent a GI consultation, upper endoscopy was a more common outcome than colonoscopy (51.3% vs. 23.1%; P < .0001). Of the 34 patients who underwent colonoscopy or sigmoidoscopy, one was diagnosed with colorectal cancer and one with advanced adenoma.

Overt GI bleeding was a better predictor of a GI consultation than a positive FIT result. In fact, use of FIT for patients with overt GI bleeding indicates a poor understanding of the test’s utility, the investigators reported.

“For patients with overt GI bleeding, having a positive FIT made no difference on how often a bleeding source was identified on endoscopy, suggesting that FIT should not be used to guide decisions about endoscopy or hospitalization,” Dr. Bhatti said.

In light of these findings, the team urges their peers to consider measures to reduce FIT tests for unnecessary indications.

“We feel that FIT is unfit for use in the inpatient and emergency settings, and measures should be taken to curb its use,” Dr. Bhatti concluded. “We presented our data to our hospital leadership and a decision was made to remove the FIT as an orderable test from the EMR.”

These results are “striking,” said Jennifer Christie, MD, from the University, Atlanta.

“We should be educating our ER providers and inpatient providers about the proper use of FIT,” she said in an interview. “Another option – and this has been done in many settings with the fecal occult blood test – is just take FIT off the units or out of the ER, so providers won’t be tempted to use it as an assessment of these patients. Because often times, as this study showed, it doesn’t really impact outcomes.”

In fact, unnecessary FI testing could put patients at risk for unnecessary procedures. “We also know that calling for an inpatient or ER consult from a gastroenterologist may increase both length of stay and costs,” she added.

Dr. Bhatti and Dr. Christie disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

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Most fecal immunochemical tests (FIT) in the hospital setting or the ED are performed for inappropriate indications, according to new data.

“This is the largest study that focuses exclusively on the use of FIT in the ED, inpatient wards, and in the ICU, and it shows significant misuse,” said investigator Umer Bhatti, MD, from Indiana University, Indianapolis.

The only “validated indication” for FIT is to screen for colorectal cancer. However, “99.5% of the FIT tests done in our study were for inappropriate indications,” he reported at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology, where the study was honored with an ACG Presidential Poster Award.

And the inappropriate use of FIT in these settings had no positive effect on clinical decision-making, he added.

For their study, Dr. Bhatti and colleagues looked at all instances of FIT use in their hospital’s electronic medical records from November 2017 to October 2019 to assess how often FIT was being used, the indications for which it was being used, and the impact of its use on clinical care.

They identified 550 patients, 48% of whom were women, who underwent at least one FIT test. Mean age of the study cohort was 54 years. Only three of the tests, or 0.5%, were performed to screen for colorectal cancer (95% confidence interval, 0.09%-1.52%).

Among the indications documented for FIT were anemia in 242 (44.0%) patients, suspected GI bleeding in 225 (40.9%), abdominal pain in 31 (5.6%), and change in bowel habits in 19 (3.5%).

The tests were performed most often in the ED (45.3%) and on the hospital floor (42.2%), but were also performed in the ICU (10.5%) and burn unit (2.0%).

Overall, 297 of the tests, or 54%, were negative, and 253, or 46%, were positive.

“GI consults were obtained in 46.2% of the FIT-positive group, compared with 13.1% of the FIT-negative patients” (odds ratio, 5.93; 95% CI, 3.88-9.04, P < .0001), Dr. Bhatti reported.

Among FIT-positive patients, those with overt bleeding were more likely to receive a GI consultation than those without (OR, 3.3; 95% CI, 1.9-5.5; P < .0001).

Of the 117 FIT-positive patients who underwent a GI consultation, upper endoscopy was a more common outcome than colonoscopy (51.3% vs. 23.1%; P < .0001). Of the 34 patients who underwent colonoscopy or sigmoidoscopy, one was diagnosed with colorectal cancer and one with advanced adenoma.

Overt GI bleeding was a better predictor of a GI consultation than a positive FIT result. In fact, use of FIT for patients with overt GI bleeding indicates a poor understanding of the test’s utility, the investigators reported.

“For patients with overt GI bleeding, having a positive FIT made no difference on how often a bleeding source was identified on endoscopy, suggesting that FIT should not be used to guide decisions about endoscopy or hospitalization,” Dr. Bhatti said.

In light of these findings, the team urges their peers to consider measures to reduce FIT tests for unnecessary indications.

“We feel that FIT is unfit for use in the inpatient and emergency settings, and measures should be taken to curb its use,” Dr. Bhatti concluded. “We presented our data to our hospital leadership and a decision was made to remove the FIT as an orderable test from the EMR.”

These results are “striking,” said Jennifer Christie, MD, from the University, Atlanta.

“We should be educating our ER providers and inpatient providers about the proper use of FIT,” she said in an interview. “Another option – and this has been done in many settings with the fecal occult blood test – is just take FIT off the units or out of the ER, so providers won’t be tempted to use it as an assessment of these patients. Because often times, as this study showed, it doesn’t really impact outcomes.”

In fact, unnecessary FI testing could put patients at risk for unnecessary procedures. “We also know that calling for an inpatient or ER consult from a gastroenterologist may increase both length of stay and costs,” she added.

Dr. Bhatti and Dr. Christie disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

 

Most fecal immunochemical tests (FIT) in the hospital setting or the ED are performed for inappropriate indications, according to new data.

“This is the largest study that focuses exclusively on the use of FIT in the ED, inpatient wards, and in the ICU, and it shows significant misuse,” said investigator Umer Bhatti, MD, from Indiana University, Indianapolis.

The only “validated indication” for FIT is to screen for colorectal cancer. However, “99.5% of the FIT tests done in our study were for inappropriate indications,” he reported at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology, where the study was honored with an ACG Presidential Poster Award.

And the inappropriate use of FIT in these settings had no positive effect on clinical decision-making, he added.

For their study, Dr. Bhatti and colleagues looked at all instances of FIT use in their hospital’s electronic medical records from November 2017 to October 2019 to assess how often FIT was being used, the indications for which it was being used, and the impact of its use on clinical care.

They identified 550 patients, 48% of whom were women, who underwent at least one FIT test. Mean age of the study cohort was 54 years. Only three of the tests, or 0.5%, were performed to screen for colorectal cancer (95% confidence interval, 0.09%-1.52%).

Among the indications documented for FIT were anemia in 242 (44.0%) patients, suspected GI bleeding in 225 (40.9%), abdominal pain in 31 (5.6%), and change in bowel habits in 19 (3.5%).

The tests were performed most often in the ED (45.3%) and on the hospital floor (42.2%), but were also performed in the ICU (10.5%) and burn unit (2.0%).

Overall, 297 of the tests, or 54%, were negative, and 253, or 46%, were positive.

“GI consults were obtained in 46.2% of the FIT-positive group, compared with 13.1% of the FIT-negative patients” (odds ratio, 5.93; 95% CI, 3.88-9.04, P < .0001), Dr. Bhatti reported.

Among FIT-positive patients, those with overt bleeding were more likely to receive a GI consultation than those without (OR, 3.3; 95% CI, 1.9-5.5; P < .0001).

Of the 117 FIT-positive patients who underwent a GI consultation, upper endoscopy was a more common outcome than colonoscopy (51.3% vs. 23.1%; P < .0001). Of the 34 patients who underwent colonoscopy or sigmoidoscopy, one was diagnosed with colorectal cancer and one with advanced adenoma.

Overt GI bleeding was a better predictor of a GI consultation than a positive FIT result. In fact, use of FIT for patients with overt GI bleeding indicates a poor understanding of the test’s utility, the investigators reported.

“For patients with overt GI bleeding, having a positive FIT made no difference on how often a bleeding source was identified on endoscopy, suggesting that FIT should not be used to guide decisions about endoscopy or hospitalization,” Dr. Bhatti said.

In light of these findings, the team urges their peers to consider measures to reduce FIT tests for unnecessary indications.

“We feel that FIT is unfit for use in the inpatient and emergency settings, and measures should be taken to curb its use,” Dr. Bhatti concluded. “We presented our data to our hospital leadership and a decision was made to remove the FIT as an orderable test from the EMR.”

These results are “striking,” said Jennifer Christie, MD, from the University, Atlanta.

“We should be educating our ER providers and inpatient providers about the proper use of FIT,” she said in an interview. “Another option – and this has been done in many settings with the fecal occult blood test – is just take FIT off the units or out of the ER, so providers won’t be tempted to use it as an assessment of these patients. Because often times, as this study showed, it doesn’t really impact outcomes.”

In fact, unnecessary FI testing could put patients at risk for unnecessary procedures. “We also know that calling for an inpatient or ER consult from a gastroenterologist may increase both length of stay and costs,” she added.

Dr. Bhatti and Dr. Christie disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

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