Heart Failure Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of Furosemide Withdraw in Stable Chronic Heart Failure Outpatients With Left Ventricular Dysfunction - the Brazilian Research Network on Heart Failure
The ReBIC-1 trial was designed to evaluate the potential clinical risks and benefits of withdrawing furosemide use in stable, apparently euvolemic, chronic HF outpatients in a multicentric double-blinded randomized clinical trial.
Diuretics play a central role in HF treatment, particularly during episodes of acute
decompensation. Furosemide is the prototype of loop diuretics, acting through the inhibition
of the Na+K+2Cl- pump at the thick ascending limb of the Henle loop. According to
international registries, almost all patients receive a loop diuretic during a hospital stay
for acute decompensated HF and the majority are discharged taking a "maintenance dose".
Despite the undeniable beneficial hemodynamic effects of improvement of peripheral and
central congestion, the net clinical effect of the chronic use of diuretics on HF prognosis
is controversial.
Observational studies suggest that use of high doses of diuretics might be related to
unfavorable clinical consequences. Undesirable side effects of loop diuretics are not
trivial and involve activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, elevation of
norepinephrine levels, increases in heart rate, detrimental effects on renal function and
several electrolyte disturbances.
Few prospective clinical studies, however, directly evaluated the clinical risks and
benefits of diuretics. Most of these studies were under-powered, performed more than 2
decades ago, before modern HF therapy with current drugs and devices was completely
implemented.
Current clinical guidelines are unanimous to recommend use of diuretics in HF patients with
clinical signs and symptoms of congestion, but reinforce the lack of solid clinical
scientific evidence for its use, and the potential risks that might be involved. The
European Society of Cardiology proposes the administration of the lowest dose necessary to
achieve euvolemia, avoiding the unnecessary delay in the use of drugs that modify the
natural history of the disease.
Based on these uncertainties about diuretic use in HF, the ReBIC-1 trial was designed to
evaluate the potential clinical risks and benefits of withdrawing furosemide use in stable,
apparently euvolemic, chronic HF outpatients in a multicentric double-blinded randomized
clinical trial.
ReBIC is a Brazilian research network created to develop clinical studies in heart failure
and composed predominantly by university tertiary care hospitals. ReBIC and the ReBIC-1
trial were sponsored by the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological
Development (CNPq, Brazil), a public governmental institution. Data collection, management,
and analysis were performed at the network's data coordinating center at Hospital de
Clínicas de Porto Alegre. All the authors reviewed and approved the manuscript and assume
full responsibility for the accuracy and completeness of the data and for the fidelity of
this report of the study protocol.
ReBIC-1 is a randomized, double-blind, parallel group, placebo-controlled, two-arm trial
comparing the short-term efficacy and safety of discontinuation of furosemide in apparently
euvolemic outpatients with chronic stable HF and reduced left ventricular ejection fraction
(HF-REF).
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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