Cardiovascular‐kidney‐metabolic overlap in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction: Cardiac structure and function, clinical outcomes, and response to sacubitril/valsartan in PARAGON‐HF

Aims Cardiovascular‐kidney‐metabolic (CKM) multimorbidity is prevalent among individuals with heart failure (HF), but whether cardiac structure and function, clinical outcomes, and treatment response to sacubitril/valsartan vary in relation to CKM status is unknown. Methods and results In this PARAG...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of heart failure 2024-08, Vol.26 (8), p.1762-1774
Hauptverfasser: Lassen, Mats C.H., Ostrominski, John W., Claggett, Brian L., Packer, Milton, Zile, Michael, Desai, Akshay S., Shah, Amil M., Cikes, Maja, Merkely, Bela, Gori, Mauro, Wang, Xiaowen, Hegde, Sheila M., Pfeffer, Marc A., Lefkowitz, Martin, McMurray, John J.V., Solomon, Scott D., Vaduganathan, Muthiah
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Aims Cardiovascular‐kidney‐metabolic (CKM) multimorbidity is prevalent among individuals with heart failure (HF), but whether cardiac structure and function, clinical outcomes, and treatment response to sacubitril/valsartan vary in relation to CKM status is unknown. Methods and results In this PARAGON‐HF post‐hoc analysis, we evaluated the impact of CKM multimorbidity (atherosclerotic cardiovascular [CV] disease, chronic kidney disease, and type 2 diabetes) on cardiac structure and function, clinical outcomes, and treatment effects of sacubitril/valsartan versus valsartan. The primary outcome was a composite of total HF hospitalizations and CV death. Secondary outcomes included the individual components of the primary outcome and a composite kidney outcome (sustained estimated glomerular filtration rate reduction of ≥50%, end‐stage kidney disease, or kidney‐related death). At baseline, 35.2% had one CKM condition, 33.3% had two, 15.9% had three, and only 15.6% had HF alone. CKM multimorbidity was associated with higher septal and posterior wall thickness, lower global longitudinal strain, higher E/e', and worse right ventricular function. Total HF hospitalizations or CV death increased with greater CKM multimorbidity, with the highest relative risk observed with three CKM conditions (rate ratio 3.06, 95% confidence interval 2.33–4.03), compared with HF alone. Treatment effects of sacubitril/valsartan were consistent irrespective of the number of CKM conditions for the primary endpoint (pinteraction = 0.75), CV death (pinteraction = 0.82), total HF hospitalizations (pinteraction = 0.67), and the composite kidney endpoint (pinteraction = 0.99). Conclusions Cardiovascular‐kidney‐metabolic multimorbidity was common in PARAGON‐HF and associated with adverse changes in cardiac structure and function and with a stepwise increase in risk of clinical outcomes. Treatment effects of sacubitril/valsartan were consistent irrespective of CKM burden.Clinical Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01920711. Cardiovascular‐kidney‐metabolic (CKM) overlap in heart failure (HF) with preserved ejection fraction. ASCVD, atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease; CI, confidence interval; CKD, chronic kidney disease; E/e', ratio of early diastolic mitral inflow velocity to early diastolic mitral annulus velocity; LA, left atrial; LV, left ventricular; RV, right ventricular; T2D, type 2 diabetes; TAPSE, tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion.
ISSN:1388-9842
1879-0844
1879-0844
DOI:10.1002/ejhf.3304