Guidelines

ACC panel defines, advises on heart failure with ‘recovered’ EF


 

FROM THE JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY

Managing HFrecEF

Management should include assessment of jugular vein distention and signs of volume overload – “particularly concerning in HFrecEF” – the panel noted. ECG is cost effective, and signs of left-bundle branch block are predictors of low success with GDMT alone. The panel also recommended a family history going back three generations and consideration of genetic testing to determine the risk for sudden cardiac death. Two-dimensional ECG can help predict GDMT response and cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging can provide information about myocardial substrate at the time of diagnosis of HFrEF.

The panel suggested four areas for future research: 1) improved phenotyping of HFrEF; 2) use of inception cohorts to better understand the natural history of HFrecEF; 3) clinical trials to better define those clinical care components most effective at maintaining remission; and 4) basic studies to better define the biology of HFrecEF. “The goal,” wrote Dr. Wilcox and colleagues, “is to develop new therapeutic targets that will enable patients with HFrecEF to experience a durable remission from HF.”

Dr. Wilcox reported receiving funding from the National Institutes of Health and the American Heart Association, and financial relationships with Abbott, Medtronic, and Cytokinetics. Dr. Mann has received funding from NIH and reports financial relationships with MyoKardia and Novartis. Coauthors reported funding from NIH and AHA and financial relationships with Novartis, Amgen, AstraZeneca, Thoratec Corporation (Abbott), Sanofi, Pfizer, MyoKardia and American Regent.

SOURCE: Wilcox JE et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2020;76:719-34.

Pages

Recommended Reading

VA readmissions program not linked to increased death
MDedge Internal Medicine
Dapagliflozin benefits low-EF heart failure regardless of diuretic dose: DAPA-HF
MDedge Internal Medicine
Findings of most heart failure trials reported late or not at all
MDedge Internal Medicine
SGLT2 inhibitors, developed for T2D, now ‘belong to cardiologists and nephrologists’
MDedge Internal Medicine
Prior beta-blockers predict extra burden of heart failure in women with ACS
MDedge Internal Medicine
Empagliflozin failed to improve exercise capacity in heart failure
MDedge Internal Medicine
Psoriatic disease inflammation linked to heart failure
MDedge Internal Medicine
SCD-HeFT 10-year results: Primary-prevention ICD insights in nonischemic heart failure
MDedge Internal Medicine
Heart damage even after COVID-19 ‘recovery’ evokes specter of later heart failure
MDedge Internal Medicine
Early palliative care fails to improve QOL in advanced heart failure
MDedge Internal Medicine