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Terapia non Chirurgica del Paziente con Scompenso Cardiaco Avanzato Metodi di valutazione della sincronizzazione ventricolare e loro affidabilità G. Lupi, ASL IV Chiavarese G Lupi, Dipartimento di Cardiologia ASL III Genovese ADVANCED HEART FAILURE treatments are inherently limited morbidity is typically progressive survival is often short. ADVANCED HEART FAILURE • Repeated hospitalizations for heart failure • Intolerance or reduction of doses of neurohormonal antagonists • Escalation of diuretics • Development of end-organ dysfunction, malnutrition (or cardiac cachexia) • Refractory arrhythmias with or without device shocks • • ‘a pattern of clinical characteristics should suggest that a patient has become refractory to traditional therapies’ Fang Et Al 2015 Non Surgical Theraphy • • • • • Medical therapy (GDMT) dosed appropriately Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) Arrhythmia management Volume status optimization Inotrope infusion Medical therapy (GDMT) • ….Critical to the definition of ACHF is persistence of severe symptoms, functional limitation and cardiac dysfunction despite optimal therapy Metra et Al 2007 ADVANCED HEART FAILURE ‘The first step in the assessment is to confirm that the patient's conventional heart failure management has been maximized and that reversible factors (eg, ischemia, alcohol) have been addressed…. Comorbidities …should also be addressed’ Fang Et Al 2015 GUIDELINE RECOMMENDED MEDICAL THERAPY • There is evidence that neurohormonal antagonists are administered at lower rates and at lower doses in patients with more severe HF • This may have a detrimental effect on prognosis Komajda et Al EHJ 2005 GUIDELINE RECOMMENDED MEDICAL THERAPY • It is important to make every attempt to initiate and up-titrate all indicated medications to the doses shown to be effective. Metra et Al 2007 • An often underappreciated indicator of advanced heart failure is the lack of response to or intolerance of heart failure therapies. Fang Et Al 2015 Stevenson L et Al 2007 CRT many stage D heart failure patients do not match clinical trial populations owing to age or comorbidities CRT implantation in patients not likely to improve is associated with several risks, including procedural risks, device infection, risk of delay in transplantation referral, and cost Although CRT has strong evidence of benefit in HFrEF, patients with advanced heart failure have accounted for only ∼4% of the patients in CRT clinical trials. Primary time to all-cause death or hospitalization. Time to all-cause death or HF hospitalization. Circulation 2007 ICD An implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) may abort death, but it does not improve symptoms. an ICD will not necessarily improve quality of life and is not disease modifying guidelines do not support the use of an ICD if overall survival is estimated to be <1 year Volume status optimization • ‘When symptoms dominate the picture, they are primarily symptoms of congestion… ‘ •‘Many patients considered to have refractory heart failure can return to a reasonable level of comfort and function when fluid balance is restored and maintained’ Stevenson EJHF 2015 DIURETIC RESISTANCE ter Maaten, J. M. et al. (2014) Diuretic response in acute heart failure—pathophysiology, evaluation, and therapy Nat. Rev. Cardiol. doi:10.1038/nrcardio.2014.215 Figure 2 Mechanisms of loop diuretic resistance An approach to treating patients with acute heart failure who are diuretic resistant ter Maaten, J. M. et al. (2014) Diuretic response in acute heart failure—pathophysiology, evaluation, and therapy Nat. Rev. Cardiol. doi:10.1038/nrcardio.2014.215 How HSS alters renal and cardiac hemodynamics instantaneous mobilization of extravascular fluid into the intravascular space through the osmotic action of HSS reduction in systemic vascular resistance through baroreceptor reflex . increased cardiac output, renal blood flow and enhanced organ perfusion. therapeutic furosemide concentration in renal tubules along with the continued delivery of sodium. •“The results of this meta-analysis demonstrate that in patients with advanced CHF concomitant hypertonic saline administration improved weight loss, preserved renal function, and decreased length of hospitalization, mortality and heart failure rehospitalization.” ULTRAFILTRATION Ultrafiltration may represent a more rapid and physiologic method of fluid removal than diuretic therapy Associated with a longer clinical stabilization and a lower rehospitalization rate ULTRAFILTRATION Concerns about the safety of ultrafiltration Procedural-associated serious adverse events could potentially offset clinical benefit and hinder its widespread use. Only when all diuretic strategies are unsuccessful, ultrafiltration or other renal replacement strategies are considered as reasonable alternatives ULTRAFILTRATION Ultrafiltration •Main questions: When patients with congestion may benefit the most from Ultrafiltration? When they should be treated with such an approach as a firstline therapy? CUORE TRIAL prospective, randomized, unblinded study ultrafiltration vs standard medical treatment in patients with large fluid overload due to congestive HF. Exclusion criteria: contraindications to anticoagulation severe renal insufficiency (serum creatinine >3.0 mg/dL) acute pulmonary edema or cardiogenic shock CUORE TRIAL Session duration and the ultrafiltration rate (100-500 mL/h) left to the discretion of the treating physician Fluid removal of > 2 liters (recommended not to exceed 75% of the estimated initial weight increase) intravenous dosage of diuretics started before randomization unchanged unless required by the clinical condition CUORE TRIAL ULTRAFILTRATION If used late during hospitalization, in patients who had already developed acute kidney injury, as in (CARRESS-HF), no advantage from ultrafiltration Early treatment with ultrafiltration in hospitalized HF patients with hypervolemia (UNLOAD and CUORE) is associated with significant reduction of rehospitalizations for HF Prudential recommendation of incomplete (<75% of estimated body weight gain) and slowly obtained fluid removal Volume Status Optimization •Once optimal fluid status has been restored, maintenance of fluid balance is the challenge. •No solid bases of evidence on the best way to do this. •No current information to guide therapy in patients for whom diuresis to the level of symptom relief is repeatedly accompanied by progressive worsening of renal function ESPERIENZA AMBULATORIO INFERMIERISTICO • • • • • 216 VISITE 57 PAZIENTI 22 CASI IPERIDRATAZIONE ASINTOMATICA 4 CASI DISIDRATAZIONE 11 CASI VALUTAZIONE INF NON CONFERMATA DAL MEDICO ATTRAVERSO ULTERIORI ACCERTAMENTI Intermittent or continuous use of dobutamine and phosphodiesterase inhibitors • two focused meta-analyses • traditional inotropic drugs did not show any patient benefits Inotrope Infusion Nieminem et Al Int J Cardiol 2014 AIM OF INOTROPIC THERAPY •Patients listed for heart transplantation or waiting for VAD implantation : •preservation of organ function (e.g., renal and hepatic function) as a bridging measure •Patients who are not eligible (palliative) •stabilisation and well-being of the patients and their avoidance of re-hospitalisation. LEVOSIMENDAN LEVOSIMENDAN Esperienza della Cardiologia di SESTRI P • BRIDGE THERAPY • 5 PAZIENTI • PALLIATIVE THERAPY • 8 PAZIENTI • 2 impianto LVAD • 1 Trapianto • 1 Uscito dalla lista per miglioramento • 1 deceduto in lista • • 3 IN TRATTAMENTO • 5 DECEDUTI •(MEDIANA SOPRAVVIVENZA 6 MESI RANGE 4-9) SURVIVAL IN INOTROPES • Optimally treated patients in the Investigation of Non–Transplant-Eligible Patients Who Are Inotrope Dependent (INTREPID) trial had survival rates of 22% at 6 months and 11% at 1 year Fang 2015 Quando non c'è più niente da fare, c'è ancora molto da fare Aging is frequently accompanied by the comorbid conditions of frailty and malnutrition, which are important predictors of outcome with heart failure and affect the feasibility of advanced heart failure therapies. depressed patients have decreased medication adherence, worse health status, increased health care utilization, and increased mortality. Cognitive impairment is also a predictor of mortality in heart failure and may affect a patient's self-care ability, thereby limiting therapies for stage D heart failure. there is not enough evidence to conclude that CRT implantation in stage D heart failure is inappropriate, the decision should be factored into the overall goals and plan of care for each patient In one series, 545 of 729 CRT patients met ≥3 cardiac criteria for heart transplantation. 64 The observed 92% and 77% survival rates at 1 and 3 years, respectively, rivaled or exceeded expected transplantation outcomes In a subset of patients with ambulatory New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class IV heart failure enrolled in the Comparison of Medical Therapy, Pacing, and Defibrillation in Heart Failure (COMPANION) trial, CRT and CRT-defibrillator therapy delayed the time to all-cause mortality and hospitalization with a trend for improvement in survival. Diuretic resistance Diuretic therapy ter Maaten, J. M. et al. (2014) Diuretic response in acute heart failure—pathophysiology, evaluation, and therapy Nat. Rev. Cardiol. doi:10.1038/nrcardio.2014.215 DIURETIC RESISTANCE Advanced heart failure is characterized by increasing inability to meet the metabolic demands of end organs and skeletal muscle, resulting in renal and hepatic insufficiency and reduction in functional capacity, cachexia, and fatigue. End-organ dysfunction increases the mortality associated with heart failure and can potentially preclude application of advanced heart failure therapies. •If a major goal is to treat the symptoms, therapies should be reviewed in that context. •ACEI and beta blockers have clearly been shown to impact disease progression and survival, but benefit on current symptoms has been very difficult to demonstrate