Preserving Hope for Patients With HFpEF
Volume 1, Issue 2
“A rose by any other name would smell as sweet.”
When it comes to managing patients with heart failure (HF), it’s all in the name. For patients classified as heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), there are many options for guideline-directed medical therapies (GDMT) that can unequivocally reduce morbidity and prolong life. Conversely, for patients with a preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), there are no treatments that have conclusively proven effective. This fact is quite staggering when one considers that nearly half of the roughly six million Americans with heart failure have a preserved ejection fraction. In this week’s issue of “Talking Therapeutics,” we take a look at the latest updates on how heart failure is classified and explore a novel treatment option for patients with HFpEF.
Point 1: A Universal Definition for Heart Failure Has Finally Been Established
While we may think that the current heart failure classifications are uniform, there is actually significant variability in the definitions used for the various HFrEF and HFpEF clinical trials. Fortunately, the American, European, and Japanese heart failure societies recently convened to develop the Universal Definition and Classification of Heart Failure. In this document, standardized definitions for heart failure according to ejection fraction have been proposed:
- HF with reduced EF (HFrEF): HF with an LVEF of ≤40%;
- HF with mildly reduced EF (HFmrEF): HF with an LVEF of 41% to 49%;
- HF with preserved EF (HFpEF): HF with an LVEF of ≥50%;
- HF with improved EF (HFimpEF): HF with a baseline LVEF of ≤40%, a >10-point increase from baseline LVEF, and a second measurement of LVEF of >40%.
Having standardized cuff offs for ejection fraction is critical for accurately classifying patients for appropriate therapy, a fact which is even more important because….
Point 2: The FDA Just Approved sacubitril/valsartan (Entresto) for Patients With HFpEF
This news, which is based on data from the PARAGON study, expands the approved label for Entresto to include patients with heart failure whose ejection fraction is “not normal.” Who exactly falls into the category of “not normal” is somewhat up for debate, especially since the PARAGON trial defined HFpEF as an ejection fraction of ≥45%. Digging a little deeper into the data, the benefits seen in PARAGON were primarily in those with ejection fractions between 45% to 57%. This may seem like a narrow range, but expanding Entresto use to these patients would actually cover two-thirds of Americans with HFpEF, which translates into roughly 2 million new candidates. Given the relative lack of effective therapies, this change in the FDA labelling is very significant for patients afflicted with HFpEF.
The bottom line for this week’s column: thanks to a world-wide collaboration of experts, we now have a clear classification schema for patients with heart failure; furthermore, all symptomatic heart failure patients with a confirmed ejection fraction less than 57% should be evaluated for therapy with Entresto.
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