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Long‐term L‐Triiodothyronine (T3) treatment in stable systolic heart failure patients: a randomised, double‐blind, cross‐over, placebo‐controlled intervention study

Authors :
Ilan Raymond
Birte Nygaard
Helena Dominguez
Peter D Mark
Bo Zerahn
Ulrik B. Andersen
Jens Faber
Caroline Kistorp
Pernille Holmager
Ulla Schmidt
Source :
Clinical Endocrinology. 83:931-937
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Wiley, 2014.

Abstract

SummaryBackground Chronic heart failure (HF) is characterized by reduced serum T3 levels and increased activity of the T3 degrading enzyme deiodinase D3. This may result in an intracellular composition of the cardiomyocyte mimicking that of hypothyroidism. Short-term T3-administration to systolic HF patients might be beneficial. Question Does long-term treatment with T3 have a beneficial effect on cardiac function and neurohormonal activation in chronic systolic HF patients with serum T3 levels below 1·6 nmol/l? Design A randomized, double-blind, cross-over, placebo-controlled intervention study with oral T3 treatment twice daily for 3 months. The T3 dose was uptitrated to a final dose avoiding reduced TSH levels. Primary end-point Left-ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF). Methods Cardiac imaging was performed using multiple gated tomographic radionuclide ventriculography (MUGA-SPECT). Neurohormonal stimulation was evaluated by plasma measurements of natriuretic peptides, aldosterone, renin, noradrenalin and copeptin levels. The patients were monitored for potential cardiac arrhythmias at the start of each treatment period. Results Thirteen patients completed the protocol. Mean LVEF was 43%, range: 37–52 and serum T3 levels 1·4 nmol/l (0·9–1·6). The T3 dose was 20 μg per day (10–40). TSH levels did not change between groups, whereas serum T3 levels increased in the active arm. Cardiac function as measured by LVEF, end-diastolic and end-systolic volumes and cardiac output did not change during T3-treatment and neither did the neurohormonal profile. There were no side-effects in terms of cardiac arrhythmias and no change in resting heart rate. Conclusions This study does not support the hypothesis that oral T3 treatment might be beneficial to patients with chronic, stable systolic HF with a modest degree of reduced LVEF and low-normal serum T3 concentrations. The study included both functional studies of heart contractility as well as measures of the neurohormonal activation.

Details

ISSN :
13652265 and 03000664
Volume :
83
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Endocrinology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....28335d9ee420148f2758a80fcc22ced7