Document details

Levosimendan in Outpatients with Advanced Heart Failure: Single-Center Experience of 200 Intermittent Perfusions

Author(s): Ferreira Reis, J ; Gonçalves, A ; Ilhão Moreira, R ; Pereira-da-Silva, T ; Timóteo, AT ; Pombo, D ; Carvalho, T ; Correia, C ; Santos, C ; Cruz Ferreira, R

Date: 2023

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.17/4535

Origin: Repositório do Centro Hospitalar de Lisboa Central, EPE

Subject(s): HSM CAR; Humans; Female; Male; Cardiotonic Agents / therapeutic use; Heart Failure* / therapy; Hydrazones / therapeutic use; Outpatients; Pyridazines* / therapeutic use; Simendan / pharmacology; Simendan / therapeutic use; Stroke Volume; Ventricular Function, Left


Description

Introduction: Patients with advanced heart failure (HF) have high morbidity and mortality, with only a small proportion being eligible for advanced therapies. Intermittent outpatient levosimendan infusion has been shown to provide symptomatic relief and reduce the rate of HF events. Our aim was to assess the safety and efficacy of outpatient levosimendan administration in an advanced HF population. Methods: This is a report of a single-center experience of consecutive advanced HF patients referred for intermittent intravenous outpatient administration of levosimendan, between January 2018 and March 2021. Baseline and follow-up evaluation included clinical assessment, laboratory tests, transthoracic echocardiography and cardiopulmonary exercise testing. Baseline and clinical follow-up data were compared using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test. Results: A total of 24 patients (60.8 years, 83% male, mean left ventricular ejection fraction [LVEF] 24%), with a median of 1.5 HF hospitalizations in the previous six months, were referred for outpatient levosimendan pulses, the majority as a bridge to transplantation or due to clinical deterioration. At six-month follow-up there was a significant reduction in HF hospitalizations to 0.4±0.7 (p<0.001). NYHA class IV (52.2% to 12.5%, p=0.025) and NT-proBNP (8812.5 to 3807.4 pg/ml, p=0.038) were also significantly reduced. Exercise capacity was significantly improved, including peak oxygen uptake (p=0.043) and VE/VCO2 slope (p=0.040). LVEF improved from 24.0% to 29.7% (p=0.008). No serious adverse events were reported. Conclusion: Repeated levosimendan administration in advanced HF patients is a safe procedure and was associated with a reduction in HF hospitalizations, functional and LVEF improvement, and reduction in NT-proBNP levels during follow-up.

Document Type Journal article
Language English
Contributor(s) Repositório da Unidade Local de Saúde São José
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