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Hemodynamic-GUIDEd management of Heart Failure (GUIDE-HF) - 14/07/19

Doi : 10.1016/j.ahj.2019.04.014 
JoAnn Lindenfeld, MD a, , William T. Abraham, MD b, Alan Maisel, MD c, Michael Zile, MD d, Frank Smart, MD e, Maria Rosa Costanzo, MD f, Mandeep R. Mehra, MD g, Anique Ducharme, MD, MSc h, Samuel F. Sears, PhD i, Akshay S. Desai, MD, MPH g, Sara Paul, DNP-FNP, MSN j, Poornima Sood, MD, MBA k, Nessa Johnson, PhD k, Greg Ginn, MS k, Philip B. Adamson, MD k
a Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, United States 
b Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States 
c Coronary Care Unit and Heart Failure Program, Veteran Affairs San Diego Healthcare, San Diego, CA, United States 
d Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, RHJ Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center and the Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, United States 
e Cardiovascular Center of Excellence, Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, New Orleans, LA, United States 
f Advocate Heart Institute, Naperville, IL, United States 
g Center for Advanced Heart Disease, Cardiovascular Division, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States 
h Department of Medicine, Montreal Heart Institute, Montreal, Quebec, Canada 
i Department(s) of Psychology and Cardiovascular Sciences, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC, United States 
j Heart Function Program, Catawba Valley Cardiology, Conover, NC, United States 
k Abbott, Sylmar, CA, United States 

Reprint requests: JoAnn Lindenfeld, MD, Vanderbilt Heart and Vascular Institute, Medical Center East, 1215 21st Ave South, Suite #5209, Nashville, TN 37232.Vanderbilt Heart and Vascular Institute, Medical Center East1215 21st Ave South, Suite #5209NashvilleTN 37232

Abstract

Background

Hemodynamic-guided heart failure (HF) management using pulmonary artery (PA) pressures reduces HF hospitalizations (HFHs) in previously hospitalized HF patients with New York Heart Association (NYHA) class III symptoms. It remains uncertain whether this approach reduces not only HFHs but all-cause mortality and if benefits extend to patients with NYHA class II and IV HF or to those symptomatic patients with elevated natriuretic peptides without recent HFH.

Methods

GUIDE-HF is a prospective trial with 2 arms enrolling patients with HF regardless of ejection fraction (EF). The randomized arm is a single-blind, randomized, controlled trial of PA pressure-guided therapy in NYHA class II-IV patients (n = 1,000) with either a previous HFH or elevated natriuretic peptides (B-type natriuretic peptide/NT-pro–B-type natriuretic peptide). All consenting subjects will receive an implantable PA pressure sensor (CardioMEMS HF System) followed by randomization to either a treatment group, managed with provider remote access to the hemodynamic data, or a control group, managed without provider access to these data. Subjects in the control group will receive scheduled, scripted, sham contacts from the study team to maintain blinding as to their study group assignment. The primary study end point is the composite of cumulative HF events and all-cause mortality at 12 months. Secondary end points include quality-of-life and functional assessments. The single arm of the trial is an observational arm in which NYHA class III patients (n = 2,600) with either a previous HFH or elevated natriuretic peptides (but no recent HFH) will be implanted with a PA pressure sensor and observed for occurrence of the primary composite end point of cumulative HF events and mortality at 12 months. This arm will test the hypothesis that hemodynamic-guided care is similarly effective in HF patients enrolled on the basis of elevated natriuretic peptide levels but no recent HFH and those with a recent HFH.

Conclusions

GUIDE-HF is the largest clinical trial of hemodynamic-guided HF management across a broad population of HF patients, with a study design and sample size adequate to examine survival, cumulative HF events, quality of life, and functional capacity.

Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.

Plan


 RCT# NCT03387813
 Grants, contracts, or other forms of financial support: academic collaboration with the sponsor, Abbott, Sylmar, CA.
 Relationships with industry: Abbott, Sylmar, CA.


© 2019  The Authors. Publié par Elsevier Masson SAS. Tous droits réservés.
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Vol 214

P. 18-27 - août 2019 Retour au numéro
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