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Chronic Heart Failure: Diagnosis and modern management

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Title: Chronic Heart Failure: Diagnosis and modern management


1
Chronic Heart FailureDiagnosis and modern
management
  • Dr Kris McLaughlin
  • SHO 3 Cardiology
  • Aberdeen Royal Infirmary

2
Definition 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.

3
There 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

4
Epidemiology
  • 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

5
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6
Pathophysiology 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.
.
7
Grading 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.
8
Prognosis 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
9
Left 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.
10
Costs 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.
11
Average 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
12
Heart 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

14
Diagnosis 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)

15
Obtaining 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?

16
Potential 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

17
BNP 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

18
Relationship between BNP and echocardiographic
abnormalities in 331 patients with suspected
heart failure
19
Modern 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

20
The 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

21
DIG trial
22
Neurohormonal 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

23
RAAS 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
24
Major 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.
25
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26
ACE inhibitors are the cornerstone of therapy for
heart failure due to LV systolic dysfunction
27
Betablockers 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

28
Major 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.
29
Carvedilol reduces risk of death or
cardiovascular hospitalisation
38 reduction in death or hospitalisation
30
Are all betablockers equivalent?COMET trial
  • Carvedilol non selective BB (B1,B2)
  • Metoprolol selective BB (B1)

31
Primary 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
32
Betablockers are the second cornerstone of
therapy for heart failure due to LV systolic
dysfunction
33
Aldosterone receptor blockade
34
The 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.
35
RAAS 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
36
Aldosterone 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
37
The 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)

38
RALES 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
39
EPHESUS study eplerenone post MI LVSD/HF
  • 6642 patients
  • LVEF
  • ACEI/AR2B 87
  • Betablockers 75
  • Aspirin 88
  • Diuretics 60
  • Statin 47

40
Primary 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
41
A 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)

42
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43
Angiotensin 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

44
Valsartan 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

45
Val-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
46
Significant 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
47
Primary 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
48
The 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

50
The 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)

51
Drugs to avoid / stop in heart failure
  • Class I antiarrythmics
  • calcium channel blockers
  • NSAIDs
  • steroids

52
Sudden cardiac death
53
Implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs)
54
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55
SCD-HEFT trial
56
Cardiac 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

57
Biventricular pacemaker leads
58
The 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

59
COMPANION 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

60
CARE-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)

61
CARE-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

62
Summary
  • 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

63
The 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

64
Summary
  • 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

65
Acute Heart Failure
  • Top 10 Medical admission
  • In patient mortality 20
  • 3 year mortality 60

66
Acute 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

67
Acute 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

68
Acute 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

69
Acute Heart FailureKey Investigations
  • 12 lead ECG
  • Chest X-ray
  • Blood gases
  • Other
  • FBC, UEs
  • Troponin
  • BNP
  • Echocardiogram

70
Acute 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
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