Title: Chronic Heart Failure: Diagnosis and modern management
1Chronic Heart FailureDiagnosis and modern
management
- Dr Kris McLaughlin
- SHO 3 Cardiology
- Aberdeen Royal Infirmary
2Definition of heart failure
- A clinical syndrome comprising of dyspnoea,
fatigue or fluid retention due to cardiac
dysfunction, either at rest or on exertion, with
accompanying neurohormonal activation. - Braunwald E.
3There are many mechanisms of heart failure
- LV systolic dysfunction many causes
- Valvular heart disease
- Restrictive cardiomyopathy eg amyloid
- Pericardial constriction
- LV diastolic dysfunction
- Cardiac arrhythmias
4Epidemiology
- Prevalence of heart failure 0.4 - 2
- Prevalence of asymptomatic LVSD 0.4 - 2
- Prevalence and incidence increase with age (mean
age 74years) - Approximately 1 million cases in the UK
- or 100 000 in Scotland
- prevalence and incidence are increasing..
- ageing pop, better survival post MI/CHF
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6Pathophysiology of Heart Failure (due to LVSD)
Coronary artery disease
Arrhythmia
Left-ventricular injury
Pathologic remodelling
Left-ventricular dysfunction
Hypertension
Death
Cardiomyopathy
Pump failure
Neurohormonal activation
Valvular disease
- Vasoconstriction
- Endothelial
- dysfunction
- Renal sodium
- retention
- Symptoms
- Dyspnoea
- Fatigue
- Oedema
Heart failure
Adapted from Fonarow GC et al. Rev Cardiovasc
Med. 2003 4(1) 8-17.
.
7Grading of heart failure
Coronary heart disease statistics heart failure
supplement., BHF 2002, http//www.heartstats.org,
accessed 25.02.04. Prevalence data is from a
population based study Davies MK et al. The
Lancet 2001 358 439-444.
8Prognosis Heart Failure vs Cancer Mortality
The one-year survival rate for heart failure is
worse than that for cancer of the breast, uterus,
prostate bladder
Coronary heart disease statistics heart failure
supplement., BHF 2002, http//www.heartstats.org,
accessed 25.02.04. Based on Quinn M et al. ONS
2001 Cowie MR et al. Heart 2000 83 505-510.
NHL Non-Hodgkins lymphoma
9Left Ventricular Function HF
Mortality
Kaplan-Meier plot showing mortality rate in 5491
patients hospitalised with congestive HF, grouped
according to wall motion index (WMI) (log-rank, P
WMI WMI 0.8-1.2
WMI 1.3-1.6
WMI 1.6
0
Years
Left ventricular systolic function is a potent
predictor of death in hospitalised heart failure
patients
Survival data from 5491 patients admitted for new
or worsening heart failure in 34 Danish centres
1993-1996. Left ventricular systolic function was
estimated using wall motion index score.
Follow-up was 5-8 years.
Gustafsson F et al. Eur Heart J 2003 24 863-870.
10Costs of HF to the UK NHS (2000)
Hospital
Primary care
inpatient care
16.5
Drugs
9
Outpatient
60.5
6
investigations
8
Hospital
outpatient care
Coronary heart disease statistics heart failure
supplement., BHF 2002, http//www.heartstats.org,
accessed 25.02.04.
11Average Length of Hospital Admission HF vs
Other Conditions
Coronary heart disease statistics heart failure
supplement., BHF 2002, http//www.heartstats.org,
accessed 25.02.04. Based on Hospital Episode
Statistics DOH 2001 at http//www.dh.gov.uk/publi
cationsandstatistics/statistics/hospitalepisodesta
tistics/fs/en accessed 10.03.04
12Heart failure can be easy to diagnose
13.but usually it is difficult to diagnose on
clinical grounds alone
- Studies show diagnosis incorrect in approx.
30-40 of cases - Chest crepitations, oedema, tachycardia not
specific - S3, ?JVP, displaced apex insensitive, poor
inter-observer agreement - Many patients have symptoms only dyspnoea,
fatigue are non specific - Therefore objective evidence of cardiac
dysfunction mandatory - Wheeldon et al QJMed 19938617-24
14Diagnosis of heart failure (ESC guidelines)
- 1 symptoms or signs of HF (rest or exercise)
- and
- 2 objective evidence of cardiac dysfunction
- and (in doubtful cases)
- 3 response to therapy (diuretics)
15Obtaining objective evidence of cardiac
dysfunction
- Echocardiography, Radionuclide ventriculography
(RNVG/MUGA), MRI, left ventriculography - Approx. 2-4 of the population
- Approx. 22/1000/year 11 000 for the North East
- (more in fact in view of difficulty in clinical
diagnosis and serial studies!) - Are screening tests the answer?
16Potential screening tests
- 12 Lead ECG
- LVSD very unlikely if ECG normal (90-95
sensitive) - Problems with confidence of interpretation in
primary care, must be entirely normal or else
loses reliability - BNP (brain (B-type) natriuretic peptide)
- Amino acid peptide, can be measured easily in
blood - Elevated in heart failure, therefore low BNP
effectively excludes heart failure - May be useful diagnostic testmay soon come into
widespread clinical use
17BNP as a screening test for heart failure
- Highly sensitive test for HF, stable for up to
72hours, bedside testing available if desired,
relatively inexpensive - Low BNP effectively rules out heart failure or
LVSD, elevated BNP indicates need for an
echo/cardiac assessment - Many published trials assessing utility of BNP in
suspected heart failure, the general population,
post MI vast majority suggest it is a useful
and reliable screening test
18Relationship between BNP and echocardiographic
abnormalities in 331 patients with suspected
heart failure
19Modern treatment of chronic heart failure (LV
systolic dysfunction)
- The past - haemodynamic hypothesis
- The present - neurohormonal hypothesis
- ACE inhibitors
- Betablockers
- Aldosterone receptor blockers
- ARBs
- Beyond neurohormonal manipulation
- CRT
- Cardiac transplantation
20The Past
- Haemodynamic hypothesis damaged pump causes low
blood pressure and back pressure causes oedema - Liberal use of diuretics and digoxin
- Vasodilator therapy
- V-HEFT I (1986)
- Hydralazine (300mg) and ISDN (160mg) superior to
placebo (or prazosin) - Mortality 25.6 at 2 years v 34.3 in placebo
(p
21DIG trial
22Neurohormonal Hypothesis
- HF is a systemic disorder cardiac dysfunction,
renal dysfunction, skeletal muscle dysfunction,
systemic inflammation, neurohormonal activation
(mostly maladaptive) - Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system
- salt and water retention
- adverse haemodynamics
- LV hypertrophy/remodelling and fibrosis
- hypokalaemia and hypomagnesaemia
- SNS arrhythmogenic, adverse haemodynamics,
increases renin etc
23RAAS Therapeutic Intervention Sites
Angiotensinogen secreted by the liver
Renin secreted by kidney
Angiotensin I
Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) from lung
tissue
ACE inhibitors
Angiotensin II - potent vasoconstrictor
Adrenal cortex
Blood vessel constriction
Angiotensin II receptor antagonists
Aldosterone release
Blood pressure?
Aldosterone receptor antagonists
Adapted from Stier CT et al. Heart Disease 2003
5 (2) 102-118 and McMahon EG. Current Opinion in
Pharmacology 2001 1 190-196.
Target organ effects
24Major Trials of ACE-Inhibitors in HF
The CONSENSUS Trial Study Group. N Eng J Med
1987 316 1429-1435., The SOLVD Investigators. N
Eng J Med 1991 325 293-302. The SOLVD
Investigators. N Eng J Med 1992 327 685-691.,
Pfeffer MA, Braunwald E, Moye LA et al. The SAVE
Investigators. N Eng J Med 1992 327 669-677.,
The Acute Infarction Ramipril Efficacy (AIRE)
Study Investigators. Lancet 1993 342 821-828.,
Køber L, Torp-Pedersen C, Carlsen JE et al.
Trandolapril Cardiac Evaluation (TRACE) Study
Group. N Eng J Med 1995 333 1670-1676.
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26ACE inhibitors are the cornerstone of therapy for
heart failure due to LV systolic dysfunction
27Betablockers in Heart failure
- 15 years ago BB contraindicated in HF
- 1970s Sweden small studies suggest benefit
- US carvedilol trials (1996)- NYHA I-III (IV)
- n1094, 4 separate trials, 65 RRR in mortality
- CIBIS II - bisoprolol - NYHA III
- n2647, mortality 11.8 v 17.3 (p
- MERIT - metoprolol CR/XL - NYHA II-III
- improved mortality, morbidity and LVEF
28Major Trials of Beta-Blockade in HF
CIBIS Investigators and Committees. Circulation
1994 90 1765-1773. CIBIS-II Investigators and
Committees. Lancet 1999 353 9-13. MERIT-HF
Study Group. Lancet. 1999 35320012007. Packer
M, Bristow MR, Cohn JN et al. US Carvedilol Heart
Failure Study Group. N Eng J Med 1996 334
1349-1355. Poole-Wilson PA et al Lancet 2003
362 7-13. Capricorn Investigators. Lancet 2001
357 1385-1390.
29Carvedilol reduces risk of death or
cardiovascular hospitalisation
38 reduction in death or hospitalisation
30Are all betablockers equivalent?COMET trial
- Carvedilol non selective BB (B1,B2)
- Metoprolol selective BB (B1)
31Primary endpoint of mortality
40
Metoprolol
30
20
Carvedilol
Mortality ()
17 survival benefit RR 0.83 95 CI 0.74-0.93, P
0.0017
10
0
0
1
2
3
4
5
Time (years)
Poole-Wilson et al. COMET. Lancet 2003 3627-13
32Betablockers are the second cornerstone of
therapy for heart failure due to LV systolic
dysfunction
33Aldosterone receptor blockade
34The Role of Aldosterone in the Pathophysiology of
CVD
Classical (epithelial)
Non- classical (non-epithelial)
Aldosterone
Cardiovascular disease
Adapted from Liew D Krum H Current Opinion in
Investigational Drugs 2002 3(10) 1468-1473.
35RAAS Therapeutic Intervention Sites
Angiotensinogen secreted by the liver
Renin secreted by kidney
Angiotensin I
Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) from lung
tissue
ACE inhibitors
Angiotensin II - potent vasoconstrictor
Adrenal cortex
Blood vessel constriction
Angiotensin II receptor antagonists
Aldosterone release
Blood pressure?
Aldosterone receptor antagonists
Adapted from Stier CT et al. Heart Disease 2003
5 (2) 102-118 and McMahon EG. Current Opinion in
Pharmacology 2001 1 190-196.
Target organ effects
36Aldosterone not adequately suppressed by ACE
Inhibitors
100
Enalapril 20 mg bd
80
Plasma ACE (nmol/mL/min)
P 60
40
20
0
P Enalapril 20 mg bd
20
16
Plasma Aldosterone (ng/dL)
12
8
4
0
0
4 hr
24 hr
1
2
3
4
5
6
Hospital
Months
Biollaz J, et al. J Cardiovasc Pharmacol.
19824966-972
37The neurohormonal hypothesis- Proven?
- Aldosterone receptor antagonist - spironolactone
25mg vs placebo - RALES 1998
- n 1663
- NYHA IV (III)
- ACEI 89, Frusemide, digoxin 72
- 27 RRR in mortality
- Safe (hyperkalaemia excess 0.5)
38RALES All-Cause Mortality
1.00
Risk reduction 30 95 CI (18-40) p 0.95
0.90
0.85
0.80
Aldosterone receptor antagonist ACE inhibitor
loop diuretic digitalis
0.75
Probability of survival
0.70
0.65
Placebo ACE inhibitor loop diuretic
digitalis
0.60
0.55
0.50
0.45
0
3
6
9
12
15
18
21
24
27
30
33
36
Months
Pitt B et al, N Engl J Med 1999 341 709-717
39EPHESUS study eplerenone post MI LVSD/HF
- 6642 patients
- LVEF
- ACEI/AR2B 87
- Betablockers 75
- Aspirin 88
- Diuretics 60
- Statin 47
40Primary Endpoint All-Cause Mortality
22
20
18
16
Placebo Eplerenone
14
Cumulative Incidence ()
12
10
8
RR 0.85 (95 CI, 0.75-0.96) P 0.008
6
4
2
0
36
33
30
27
24
21
18
15
12
9
6
3
0
Months Since Randomisation
Pitt B et al. N Eng J Med 2003 348 1309-1321
41A word of caution
- Recent Canadian observational study
- Pre-RALES (1994)
- Prescription rates for spironACEI 34/1000
- Hospitalisation rates for hyperK 2.4/1000
- Post RALES (2001)
- Prescription rates 149/1000
- Hospitalisation rates for hyperK 11/1000
- Assoc. mortality rose from 0.3/1000 to 2.0/1000
- ? Inappropriate use of spironolactone (
- ? Inadequate monitoring (compared to clinical
trial)
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43Angiotensin Receptor Blockers (ARBs) why and
when
- ELITE I underpowered, ignore
- ELITE II ACEI perhaps better than losartan
50-75mg - Val-HeFT valsartan 160mgbd
- CHARM candasartan 32mg od
44Valsartan Heart Failure Trial
- Chronic stable HF patients (NYHA II-III)
- Valsartan added to usual heart failure therapy
(ACEi diuretics digoxin ? blockers) - 5,010 patients
- 302 centers in 16 countries
45Val-HeFT survival curves
1.0
p 0.80
0.9
Placebo
Survival probability ()
0.8
0.7
0
3
6
9
12
21
18
15
24
27
Time since randomization (months)
Cohn et al. NEJM 20013451667
46Significant benefits on combined mortality /
morbidity endpoint
1.0
13.2 risk reduction p 0.009
0.9
0.8
Event-free probability
Placebo
0.7
0.6
0
3
6
9
12
21
18
15
24
27
Time since randomization (months)
Cohn et al. NEJM 2001 3451667
47Primary endpoint greatest benefits in patients
not on ACE inhibitor therapyCombined all-cause
mortality / morbidity
1.0
44.5risk reductionp 0.0002
0.8
Event-free probability
0.6
Placebo (n 181)
Valsartan (n 185)
0.4
3
6
9
12
21
18
15
24
27
0
Time since randomization (months)
Cohn et al. AHA Scientific Sessions 2000
48The CHARM program
- CHARM added candesartan in addition to ACE I
(pre-treated) in 2548 NYHA II-IV LVSD patients - 55 on BB, 17 on spironolactone
- 15 RRR in CV death or hospitalisation for HF OR
0.85.75-.96 p0.011) - 14 RRR in CV death (2ndry outcome)
OR0.840.72-0.98, p0.029 - Similar benefit whether on BB or not
- Lancet sept 2003362
49- CHARM alternative
- 2028 ACE I intolerant patients with LVEF
- 23 RRR for CV death or hospitalisation for HF
(33 candesartan v 40 Placebo)(OR 0.87 CI
0.67-0.89) drug discontinuation rates 30 and
29 respectively
50The modern HF patient
- Diuretic loop (or BFZ) as low a dose as
required - ACE I NYHA I-IV, max. tolerated dose
- BB NYHA I-III (IV) carvedilol or bisoprolol,
stable,compensated HF, start low, go slow aim
for 25mgBD or 10mgOD respectively (or HR - Spironolactone 25mg NYHA III-IV only, watch
potassium/renal function. - Candasartan/valsartan/?losartan good
alternatives to ACE I if ACE I intolerant.
Possibly add on therapy to NYHA II-IV patients if
recurrent hospitalisations a problem and no other
options. - Hydralazine/nitrate if ACE I/ARB intolerant
(usually renal failure)
51Drugs to avoid / stop in heart failure
- Class I antiarrythmics
- calcium channel blockers
- NSAIDs
- steroids
52Sudden cardiac death
53Implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs)
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55SCD-HEFT trial
56Cardiac resynchronisation therapy (CRT) whats
the rational?
- Poorly co-ordinated LV systolic contraction
(Intra-ventricular (LV) dyssynchrony) - LV segments may contract at different time-points
during systole (and some may even contract after
systole has ended) - Results in less forceful ejection/reduced SV
- Abbreviated LV filling time
- Disruption of MV sub-valvular apparatus,
late/unco-ordinated papillary muscle contraction - Results in increased systolic mitral
regurgitation
57Biventricular pacemaker leads
58The early CRT trials
- MUSTIC-SR (QRS150), MUSTIC-AF (QRS 200)
- MIRACLE (QRS130)
- PATH-CHF (QRS120)
- CONTAK-CD (QRS120)
- PATH CHF (QRS120)
- ?Improved NYHA class, QOL, VO2max, increased EF,
reduced diuretic requirement, reduced
hospitalisations - Approx. 30 non-responder rate using ECG criteria
alone echo assessment may improve this
59COMPANION trial
- 1520 patients, medical Rx, CRT or CRT-D
- NYHA III-IV, QRS120ms, PR150ms, HF hosp in
prior 12months - All cause death or hospitalisation
- RRR of 19 with CRT and 20 with CRT-D p0.014
- 12 month all cause mortality 19 medical, 15
CRT and 12 CRT-D (p0.059 and p0.03
respectively) - Bristow NEJM 2004 3502140-2150
60CARE-HF study
- N813, NYHA III-IV, optimal medical Rx, LVEF
120ms - If QRS between 120-149ms then dyssynchrony
required 2 out of 3 criteria Ao PEI 140ms,
IVMD 40ms or delayed LV posterolat wall
contraction (M-mode/Cazeau method) - Primary endpoint death or first unplanned MACE
hospitalisation - Secondary endpoints death, deathunplanned HF
hospitalisation - Followed for mean 29 months (min 18/12)
61CARE-HF results
- Death/hosp for MACE (major adverse cardiac
events) 159 in CRT and 224 in medical (HR 0.63,
0.51-0.77 p - Death 82 (20) in CRT and 120 (30) in medical
(HR 0.64,0.48-0.85) - Death and HF hosp. 118 (20) in CRT vs 191 (47)
in medical group (HR 0.54, 0.43-0.68 p - NYHA class and QOL significantly better with CRT
62Summary
- CRT (biventricular pacing) reduces morbidity and
mortality in suitable patients with advanced
heart failure - Implantable cardioverter defibrillators reduce
mortality by reduction in sudden death - The effect is additive to maximal medical therapy
63The last resort - Cardiac Transplantation
- Theoretically excellent treatment for patients
with end-stage CHF - Advantages
- Good medium-long-term outlook (up to 70 survival
at 5years and 50 survival at 10 years) - Problems
- 15-20 mortality in first year
- Progressively fewer donors
- Long list of disqualifying factors therefore
few patients suitable - Complex follow-up, immunosuppressive Rx
64Summary
- Heart failure is a common condition with high
mortality and morbidity - Pharmacological therapies are very effective
- Device therapy (ICDs and CRTs) are increasingly
utilised - Cardiac transplantation is the last resort
applicable to only a small number of patients
65Acute Heart Failure
- Top 10 Medical admission
- In patient mortality 20
- 3 year mortality 60
66Acute Heart FailureDifferential Diagnosis
- Respiratory causes of breathlessness
- pneumonia
- PTE
- fibrosis
- COPD
- Mixed picture (NB pneumonia may cause
exacerbation of chronic heart failure) - Acidosis - respiratory compensation
- Psychogenic hyperventilation
67Acute Heart FailureKey Indicators
- Prior history of heart failure or AMI?
- Absence of history of respiratory disease
- Look for causative factors
- Evidence of myocardial ischaemia?
- Cardiac arrhythmia?
- Valve disease? (loud systolic murmur or any
diastolic murmur) - Heart failure
- Anaemia
68Acute Heart FailureBedside assessment
- ABC with high flow oxygen
- Oxygen saturations
- Respiratory rate
- Heart rate and rhythm
- Blood pressure
- Urine output
- Clinical signs- JVP, hydration status
69Acute Heart FailureKey Investigations
- 12 lead ECG
- Chest X-ray
- Blood gases
- Other
- FBC, UEs
- Troponin
- BNP
- Echocardiogram
70Acute Heart FailureImmediate therapy
- High flow O2
- i.v. loop diuretic - frusemide 50-100 mg IV
- i.v. opiates (small doses) anti-emetic
- BP 100mmHg systolic
- i.v. nitrates (e.g. GTN 0.5 mg/hour titrating up)
- BP
- urgent cardiology opinion
- may need echocardiogram ? PA catheter
- consider inotropes