A perspective on re-evaluating digoxin's role in the current management of patients with chronic systolic heart failure: targeting serum concentration to reduce hospitalization and improve safety profile

Digoxin improves exercise tolerance and reduces hospitalizations in patients with systolic heart failure, but its use has declined progressively for the past two decades. The Digitalis Investigation Group trial showed that digoxin reduced hospitalizations but had a neutral effect on total mortality....

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of heart failure 2014-05, Vol.16 (5), p.483-493
Hauptverfasser: Adams Jr, Kirkwood F., Ghali, Jalal K., Herbert Patterson, J., Stough, Wendy Gattis, Butler, Javed, Bauman, Jerry L., Ventura, Hector O., Sabbah, Hani, Mackowiak, John I., van Veldhuisen, Dirk J.
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container_end_page 493
container_issue 5
container_start_page 483
container_title European journal of heart failure
container_volume 16
creator Adams Jr, Kirkwood F.
Ghali, Jalal K.
Herbert Patterson, J.
Stough, Wendy Gattis
Butler, Javed
Bauman, Jerry L.
Ventura, Hector O.
Sabbah, Hani
Mackowiak, John I.
van Veldhuisen, Dirk J.
description Digoxin improves exercise tolerance and reduces hospitalizations in patients with systolic heart failure, but its use has declined progressively for the past two decades. The Digitalis Investigation Group trial showed that digoxin reduced hospitalizations but had a neutral effect on total mortality. There was evidence that mortality caused by worsening heart failure was less, but there was also a signal suggesting an increase in other cardiac (presumed arrhythmic) death. Use of digoxin has declined substantially and recent guideline recommendations have significantly de‐emphasized the importance of this drug in the management of heart failure. Two developments suggest that re‐evaluation of the contemporary role of digoxin in the management of heart failure with reduced ejection fraction is warranted. First, heart failure remains progressive, characterized by chronic debility, exercise intolerance, and frequent and costly hospitalizations, despite evidence‐based drug and device therapies that prolong survival. Health economics have made reducing hospitalizations in patients with heart failure a major priority. Second, a strong association has emerged between serum concentration and the safety and efficacy of digoxin, which indicates a change in our approach to dosing this agent is needed. Experimental and clinical results suggest that optimizing therapeutic benefit and avoiding harm means dosing to achieve low serum digoxin concentrations (0.5–0.9 ng/mL). Digoxin is an inexpensive agent and the totality of evidence indicates that it reduces hospitalizations and improves symptoms safely when dosed to achieve low serum concentrations. These findings suggest digoxin should have a more prominent therapeutic role in patients with heart failure and reduced ejection fraction.
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subjects Cardiotonic Agents - administration & dosage
Cardiotonic Agents - adverse effects
Cardiotonic Agents - blood
Cause of Death
Chronic Disease
digoxin
Digoxin - administration & dosage
Digoxin - adverse effects
Digoxin - blood
Disease Management
Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
Drug Monitoring - methods
Exercise Tolerance - drug effects
heart failure
Heart Failure, Systolic - drug therapy
Heart Failure, Systolic - mortality
Heart Failure, Systolic - physiopathology
Hospitalization
Humans
Mortality
Outcome Assessment (Health Care)
Practice Guidelines as Topic
Stroke Volume - drug effects
title A perspective on re-evaluating digoxin's role in the current management of patients with chronic systolic heart failure: targeting serum concentration to reduce hospitalization and improve safety profile
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