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Atrial shunt device for heart failure with preserved and mildly reduced ejection fraction (REDUCE LAP-HF II)

Authors :
Sanjiv J Shah
Barry A Borlaug
Eugene S Chung
Donald E Cutlip
Philippe Debonnaire
Peter S Fail
Qi Gao
Gerd Hasenfuß
Rami Kahwash
David M Kaye
Sheldon E Litwin
Philipp Lurz
Joseph M Massaro
Rajeev C Mohan
Mark J Ricciardi
Scott D Solomon
Aaron L Sverdlov
Vijendra Swarup
Dirk J van Veldhuisen
Sebastian Winkler
Martin B Leon
Joseph Akar
Jiro Ando
Toshihisa Anzai
Masanori Asakura
Steven Bailey
Anupam Basuray
Fabrice Bauer
Martin Bergmann
John Blair
Jeffrey Cavendish
Eugene Chung
Maja Cikes
Ira Dauber
Erwan Donal
Jean-Christophe Eicher
Peter Fail
James Flaherty
Xavier Freixa
Sameer Gafoor
Zachary Gertz
Robert Gordon
Marco Guazzi
Cesar Guerrero-Miranda
Deepak Gupta
Finn Gustafsson
Cyrus Hadadi
Emad Hakemi
Louis Handoko
Moritz Hass
Jorg Hausleiter
Christopher Hayward
Gavin Hickey
Scott Hummel
Imad Hussain
Richard Isnard
Chisato Izumi
Guillaume Jondeau
Elizabeth Juneman
Koichiro Kinugawa
Robert Kipperman
Bartek Krakowiak
Selim Krim
Joshua Larned
Gregory Lewis
Erik Lipsic
Anthony Magalski
Sula Mazimba
Jeremy Mazurek
Michele McGrady
Scott Mckenzie
Shamir Mehta
John Mignone
Hakim Morsli
Ajith Nair
Thomas Noel
James Orford
Kishan Parikh
Tiffany Patterson
Martin Penicka
Mark Petrie
Burkert Pieske
Martijn Post
Philip Raake
Alicia Romero
John Ryan
Yoshihiko Saito
Takafumi Sakamoto
Yasushi Sakata
Michael Samara
Kumar Satya
Andrew Sindone
Randall Starling
Jean-Noël Trochu
Bharathi Upadhya
Jan van der Heyden
Vanessa van Empel
Amit Varma
Amanda Vest
Tobias Wengenmayer
Ralf Westenfeld
Dirk Westermann
Kazuhiro Yamamoto
Andreas Zirlik
Cardiovascular Centre (CVC)
Cardiology
ACS - Heart failure & arrhythmias
APH - Personalized Medicine
ACS - Pulmonary hypertension & thrombosis
Source :
LANCET, 399(10330), 1130-1140. ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC, REDUCE LAP-HF II investigators 2022, ' Atrial shunt device for heart failure with preserved and mildly reduced ejection fraction (REDUCE LAP-HF II) : a randomised, multicentre, blinded, sham-controlled trial ', The Lancet, vol. 399, no. 10330, pp. 1130-1140 . https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(22)00016-2, The Lancet, 399(10330), 1130-1140. Elsevier Limited
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC, 2022.

Abstract

Background Placement of an interatrial shunt device reduces pulmonary capillary wedge pressure during exercise in patients with heart failure and preserved or mildly reduced ejection fraction. We aimed to investigate whether an interatrial shunt can reduce heart failure events or improve health status in these patients.Methods In this randomised, international, blinded, sham-controlled trial performed at 89 health-care centres, we included patients (aged >= 40 years) with symptomatic heart failure, an ejection fraction of at least 40%, and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure during exercise of at least 25 mm Hg while exceeding right atrial pressure by at least 5 mm Hg. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either a shunt device or sham procedure. Patients and outcome assessors were masked to randomisation. The primary endpoint was a hierarchical composite of cardiovascular death or non-fatal ischemic stroke at 12 months, rate of total heart failure events up to 24 months, and change in Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire overall summary score at 12 months. Pre-specified subgroup analyses were conducted for the heart failure event endpoint. Analysis of the primary endpoint, all other efficacy endpoints, and safety endpoints was conducted in the modified intention-to-treat population, defined as all patients randomly allocated to receive treatment, excluding those found to be ineligible after randomisation and therefore not treated. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03088033.Findings Between May 25, 2017, and July 24, 2020, 1072 participants were enrolled, of whom 626 were randomly assigned to either the atrial shunt device (n=314) or sham procedure (n=312). There were no differences between groups in the primary composite endpoint (win ratio 1.0 [95% CI 0.8-1.2]; p=0.85) or in the individual components of the primary endpoint. The prespecified subgroups demonstrating a differential effect of atrial shunt device treatment on heart failure events were pulmonary artery systolic pressure at 20W of exercise (p(interaction)=0.002 [>70 mm Hg associated with worse outcomes]), right atrial volume index (p(interaction)=0.012 [>= 29.7 mL/m(2), worse outcomes]), and sex (p(interaction=)0.02 [men, worse outcomes]). There were no differences in the composite safety endpoint between the two groups (n=116 [38%] for shunt device vs n=97 [31%] for sham procedure; p=0.11).Interpretation Placement of an atrial shunt device did not reduce the total rate of heart failure events or improve health status in the overall population of patients with heart failure and ejection fraction of greater than or equal to 40%. Copyright (C) 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1474547X and 01406736
Volume :
399
Issue :
10330
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1a234b151fc7802938519888819ed3f8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(22)00016-2