Acute Heart Failure Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Prospective, Placebo-controlled, Double-blind, Randomized Study to Compare Hydralazine-isosorbide-dinitrate(HYIS) Versus Placebo on Top of Std Care in African Patients With Acute Heart Failure (AHF) and Left Ventricular Dysfunction
To investigate the effect of hydralazine isosorbide dinitrate on clinical outcomes,
symptoms, cardiac parameters and functional status of African patients hospitalized with AHF
and left ventricular dysfunction during 24 weeks of therapy.
Administration of hydralazine/nitrates will be superior to placebo administration in
reducing HF readmission or death, improving dyspnoea, reducing blood pressure and brain
natriuretic peptide (BNP) in African patients admitted with AHF and left ventricular
dysfunction.
Heart failure (HF) is a pathophysiologic condition and is a final common pathway of most
forms of cardiovascular disease. Patients with HF experience poor quality of life, recurrent
emergency hospitalizations and premature mortality.
Recent publications highlight the multiple challenges of dealing with an increasing burden
of heart disease within an urban African community. The predominance of women and novel
underlying causes contrast with the demographic of HF in high income countries. More than
50% of 5328 de novo cases of heart disease captured at a tertiary clinic in Soweto presented
with some form of heart failure, mainly due to poorly treated hypertension, idiopathic
dilated cardiomyopathy, peripartum cardiomyopathy and HIV-related cardiomyopathy. The most
prevalent form of heart disease was hypertensive heart failure (> 1100 cases).
Programs have been developed in high income countries that cost-effectively prevent
progressive cardiac dysfunction in high risk individuals and apply evidence-based treatments
to optimize the overall management of HF. There is, however, a paucity of data describing
the etiology and underlying cardiac structure and function, as well as contemporary
management of HF in low to middle income countries.
In 2005 a number of leading clinicians from Africa and the US published a "call for action"
highlighting the need for an African study documenting the aetiology of acute heart failure
and the management practices applied to these patients. As a result, The Sub-Saharan Africa
Survey of Heart Failure (THESUS HF) study, was initiated in 9 countries in Africa to
determine aetiology, treatment, morbidity and mortality of acute heart failure (HF) in the
African sub-continent. The data reported in this study are unique as they are the first
larger outcome study in acute heart failure from this continent. This first multinational
study of over 1000 patients with acute decompensated heart failure conducted in all regions
of sub-Saharan Africa shows, for the first time, that the treatment of heart failure is
sub-optimal in the region, with relatively low proven medical treatments (such as
beta-blockers, hydralazine and nitrates) and inappropriately high use of aspirin in a cohort
of patients with non-ischaemic heart failure. This study also had the clear purpose of
enhancing research capacity in Africa via collaborative research as outlined in our
publication.
The use of Ace inhibitors (ACEi) and hydralazine/nitrates has never been examined in
patients admitted with acute heart failure. All studies demonstrating the beneficial effects
of these drugs were performed in patients with chronic heart failure. Previous studies have
shown that the administration of ACEi in African Americans with chronic heart failure is
less effective and not superior to combined treatment with hydralazine/isosorbide dinitrate.
The African American Heart Failure Trial (A-HeFT) established the benefit of adjunctive
administration of isosorbide dinitrate/hydralazine (ISDN/HYD) in addition to standard
therapy for African American patients with symptomatic heart failure. The risk of death was
reduced by 33% and markers of quality of life were improved.
The THESUS registry has shown a high prevalence of hypertension with left ventricular
systolic dysfunction (hypertensive heart failure) and dilated cardiomyopathy as a cause of
acute heart failure in all participating African countries. Patients in Africa are rarely
treated with this combination therapy as the fixed combination (Bidil) is unavailable in
Africa. There is uncertainty if the combination of hydralazine and isosorbide dinitrate,
available as generic agents, is beneficial in Africans and many physicians in Africa are not
aware of the outcome of those studies published in high impact factor journals, often not
available to local doctors.
Performing a multicentre study in Africa could confirm data obtained in African Americans,
create awareness for this promising combination treatment and extend the use of the
medication to patients with acute heart failure.
This BAHEF protocol has an approved 'Amendment # 1' dated 29 April 2013. Amendments were
changes to the Eligibility criteria and have been changed on this site.
To date, 22 Sept 2014, the BAHEF study has enrolled 110 study subjects. To date, 13 Aug
2015, the BAHEF study has enrolled 145 eligible subjects.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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