Nesiritide added to standard care favorably reduces systolic blood pressure compared with standard care alone in patients with acute decompensated heart failure

2005 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 327-331 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Franklin Peacock ◽  
Charles L. Emerman ◽  
Marc A. Silver
2019 ◽  
Vol 40 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
M Pareek ◽  
A M D Kristensen ◽  
M Vaduganathan ◽  
T Biering-Sorensen ◽  
C Byrne ◽  
...  

Abstract Background The Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (SPRINT) found that intensive blood pressure (BP) lowering reduced the rates of cardiovascular events and mortality but increased the risk of certain adverse events, in patients with and without chronic kidney disease at baseline. However, it is unclear whether intensive BP management is well-tolerated and modifies risk uniformly across the entire spectrum of renal function. Purpose To assess the relationship between renal function, treatment response to intensive BP lowering, and cardiovascular (CV) outcomes. Methods SPRINT was a randomized, controlled trial in which 9,361 individuals ≥50 years of age, at high CV risk but without diabetes who had a systolic BP (SBP) 130–180 mmHg, were randomized to intensive (target SBP <120mmHg) or standard antihypertensive treatment (target SBP <140mmHg). The primary efficacy endpoint was the composite of acute coronary syndromes, stroke, acute decompensated heart failure, or death from CV causes. The primary safety endpoint was the composite of serious adverse events (SAE). Renal function was assessed using the estimated glomerular filtration rate (GFR), calculated with the Modification of Diet in Renal Disease equation. We first assessed whether a linear association was present between eGFR and clinical endpoints using restricted cubic splines. We then examined the prognostic implications of eGFR, unadjusted and adjusted for demographic, clinical, and laboratory variables. We further explored the effects of intensive BP lowering across the eGFR spectrum. Results Baseline eGFR was available for 9,324 (>99%) individuals. Mean eGFR was similar between the two groups (intensive group 71.8 ml/min/1.73m2 vs. standard group 71.7 ml/min/1.73m2; P=0.92). Median follow-up was 3.3 years (range 0–4.8), with 561 primary efficacy events (6%) and 3,522 SAE (38%) recorded during the study period. Baseline eGFR was non-linearly associated with the risk of the primary efficacy endpoint, death from CV causes, death from any cause, acute decompensated heart failure, SAE, electrolyte abnormality, and acute kidney injury (test for non-linearity, P<0.05; test for overall trend, P<0.001) and remained significantly associated with all tested endpoints upon multivariable adjustment (P<0.05). Baseline eGFR significantly modified the effects of intensive BP lowering on the primary efficacy endpoint (P=0.02), acute decompensated heart failure (P=0.01), SAE (P=0.01), and acute kidney injury (P=0.04). The Figure shows treatment effects (hazard ratios) across the spectrum of eGFR for these four endpoints. P-values are for the interaction between eGFR and treatment effect. Significant interactions were not detected for other endpoints. Figure 1 Conclusions In SPRINT, lower eGFR was associated with a greater risk of both CV events and SAE. Patients with higher eGFR appeared to derive more benefit from intensive BP lowering while the relationship with safety events was complex.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miriam T Rademaker ◽  
Nicola J A Scott ◽  
Cho Yeow Koh ◽  
R Manjunatha Kini ◽  
A Mark Richards

Abstract Aims Management of acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) requires disparate treatments depending on the state of systemic/peripheral perfusion and the presence/absence of expanded body–fluid volumes. There is an unmet need for therapeutics that differentially treat each aspect. Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) plays an important role in blood pressure and volume regulation. We investigate for the first time the integrated haemodynamic, endocrine and renal effects of human ANP analogues, modified for exclusive vasodilatory (ANP-DRD) or diuretic (ANP-DGD) activities, in normal health and experimental ADHF. Methods and results We compared the effects of incremental infusions of ANP analogues ANP-DRD and ANP-DGD with native ANP, in normal (n = 8) and ADHF (n = 8) sheep. ANP-DRD administration increased plasma cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) in association with dose-dependent reductions in arterial pressure in normal and heart failure (HF) sheep similarly to ANP responses. In contrast to ANP, which in HF produced a diuresis/natriuresis, this analogue was without significant renal effect. Conversely, ANP-DGD induced marked stepwise increases in urinary cGMP, urine volume, and sodium excretion in HF comparable to ANP, but without accompanying vasodilatory effects. All peptides increased packed cell volume relative to control in both states, and in HF, decreased left atrial pressure. In response to ANP-DRD-induced blood pressure reductions, plasma renin activity rose compared to control only during the high dose in normals, and not at all in HF—suggesting relative renin inhibition, with no increase in aldosterone in either state, whereas renin and aldosterone were both significantly reduced by ANP-DGD in HF. Conclusion These ANP analogues exhibit distinct vasodilatory (ANP-DRD) and diuretic/natriuretic (ANP-DGD) activities, and therefore have the potential to provide precision therapy for ADHF patients with differing pathophysiological derangement of pressure–volume homeostasis.


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