Heart Failure Clinical Trial
Official title:
Optimization of the Treatment of Acute Heart Failure by a Non Invasive Cardiac System-Randomized Control Trial
The aim of this trial is to compare the efficacy of NICaS-directed treatment strategy to the common treatment strategy (based on clinical judgment) on morbidity and mortality in patients with decompensated congestive heart failure, and accordingly to assess whether the NICaS system can optimize and individualize the treatment of decompensated heart failure patients. A prospective randomized controlled trial in which Known HF patients, with reduced EF <40%, admitted due to decompensated HF, will be randomly assigned, in a 1:1: ratio, to either: 1) Control group that will be treated in the cardiology and internal medicine departments according to the guidelines for the management of Heart Failure. 2) Hemodynamic group patients will be examined in the cardiology and internal medicine departments and treated according to the NICaS system in addition to current guidelines. Patients in this group will be tested within 12 hours from hospitalization and thereafter on an everyday basis until discharge. For all patients randomized, therapy will be tailored to the ultimate goal of discharge on an oral medical regimen to provide better relief of CHF symptoms, to reduce filling pressures and to maintain adequate perfusion. These goals are the same for both groups, but in the control group therapy will be adjusted according to clinical assessment alone, while in the NICaS-directed group, actual measurement of hemodynamics will be used to supplement clinical assessment.
Heart failure is a complex clinical syndrome that results from any structural or functional
impairment of ventricular filling or ejection of blood. Although survival has improved, the
absolute mortality rates for HF remain approximately 50% within 5 years of diagnosis. In the
ARIC study, the 30-day, 1-year, and 5-year mortallity rates after hospitalization for HF
were 10.4%, 22%, and 42.3%, respectively. HF represents a major burden in the developed
world. In the United States, HF is the primary diagnosis for more than 1 million
hospitalized patients annually. A significant number of patients with acute decompensated
heart failure have baseline renal insufficiency. Yet perhaps more important is the change of
renal function during hospitalization. Gottlieb et al. have shown that even a small increase
in serum creatinine, e.g., 0.1 mg/dl will worsen the outcome of the patients. It is also
noteworthy that a significant rise in serum Cr generally may occur in the first 3 d of the
admission to the hospital. The mortality rate in ADHERE registry is 4% for all the patients;
however, the mortality of patients with significant renal insufficiency, i.e., Cr >3 mg/dl,
is 9.4%, and the length of hospital stay is also lengthened as compared with those who do
not have renal insufficiency. In another study of 1681 patients admitted for ADHF, Krumholz
et al. found worsening renal function during hospitalization in 28% of patients. In-hospital
mortality was more than double in those with versus without worsening renal function (7%
versus 3%). This significant difference remained at 30 d (10% versus 6%) and 6 mo (25%
versus 19%). The CHARM investigators also studied predictors of outcome in all three
component trials in 2680 patients for an average of 34 mo. They found that every 10 ml/min
decrease in eGFR increased the adjusted HR of cardiovascular death or readmission to the
hospital by 10% (1.10, CI 1.07 to 1.13, P < 0.001). Therefore, even small changes in Cr have
an important impact on in-patient mortality as well as postdischarge mortality.
Patients hospitalized for HF are at high risk for all-cause rehospitalization, with a
1-month readmission rate of 25% [4]. In 2013, physician office visits for HF cost $1.8
billion. The total cost of HF care in the United States exceeds $30 billion annually, with
over half of these costs spent on hospitalizations [3]. Presently, HF is the leading cause
of hospitalization among patients >65 years of age; the largest percentage of expenditures
related to HF are directly attributable to hospital costs. Moreover, in addition to costs,
hospitalization for acutely decompensated HF represents a sentinel prognostic event in the
course of many patients with HF, with a high risk for recurrent hospitalization (50% at 6
months). Median length of in-hospital stay in the United States is approximately 4 days,
whereas lengths of stay in Europe are generally markedly longer with a median of 9 days as
reported in the EuroHeart Failure Survey II. Although systemic and pulmonary congestion is
the main reason for hospitalization in most patients, many do not have a decrease in body
weight during their hospital stay and are discharged with signs and symptoms of HF. Given
that re-hospitalization drives much of the cost associated with HF, there has been increased
interest in predicting risk of re-hospitalization as a means to control health care costs
and reduce future risk. These risk stratification models can serve as important clinical
tools by helping to identify those patients at both ends of the spectrum of risk; patients
who are at very high risk may be observed more closely or treated more intensively, whereas
patients at low risk may need less rigorous follow-up and monitoring. In the cohort from the
OPTIMIZE-HF study with 60- to 90-day follow-up data, the most important predictors for the
combined endpoint of death or re-hospitalization were admission serum creatinine
concentration, systolic blood pressure, admission hemoglobin level, discharge use of ACE
inhibitor or ARB, and pulmonary disease. In the EVEREST trial, composed of patients admitted
with worsening HF and reduced ejection fraction, independent predictors during
hospitalization of readmission and mortality included low admission Kansas City
Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire score, high BNP, hyponatremia, tachycardia, hypotension,
absence of beta blocker therapy, and history of diabetes and arrhythmias. Nevertheless, both
models fail to provide the treating physician a simple decision making tool for predicting
which patient is stable enough to be discharged from the hospital without a high risk of
readmission. On this regard, high levels of BNP were found to be a reliable prognostic
marker for HF patients readmission after discharge. Hospitalized patients with HF can be
classified into important subgroups. These include patients with acute coronary ischemia,
accelerated hypertension and acutely decompensated HF, shock, and acutely worsening right
HF. Each of these various categories of HF has specific etiologic factors leading to
decompensation, presentation, management, and outcomes. Noninvasive modalities can be used
to classify the patient with hospitalized HF. The history and physical examination allows
estimation of a patient's hemodynamic status, that is, the degree of congestion ("dry"
versus "wet"), as well as the adequacy of their peripheral perfusion ("warm" versus "cold").
There have been limited previous randomized trials of therapy tailored during continuous
hemodynamic monitoring in heart failure. Use of an indwelling pulmonary artery catheters to
adjust therapy in advanced heart failure was first described by Kovick et al and
subsequently by Pierpont for vasodilator therapy in decompensated heart failure with high
systemic vascular resistance. There have been 11 additional randomized trials of PACs in
critical care. A meta-analysis of these trials, including ESCAPE, showed that PAC was
neutral in its effect on mortality and rehospitalization. These trials support the safety of
PACs and the overall neutral effect, while highlighting the challenge of assessing a
diagnostic tool without a consistent strategy of response with effective therapies. These
results might be explained by the balance effect of improved treatment by tailored medicine
that was counteracted by the invasive nature of PAC.
The Non-Invasive Cardiac System (NICaS: NI Medical, Hod-Hasharon, Israel), calculates the
cardiac output (CO) by measuring whole body bio impedance in a tetra-polar mode, derived
from electrodes placed on both wrists or one wrist and the contra-lateral ankle. This simple
to operate, non-invasive technique was validated in several studies to be reliable in
estimation of CO compared to traditional, invasive techniques in different settings
including HF patients. A previous study demonstrated that parameters derived from this
system showed a highly significant correlation to echocardiogram estimated ejection fraction
and serum BNP in chronic HF patients and were equally able to predict complications in this
population
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Diagnostic
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