Abstract
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1130-1140 |
Number of pages | 11 |
Journal | The Lancet |
Volume | 399 |
Issue number | 10330 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 19 Mar 2022 |
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Atrial shunt device for heart failure with preserved and mildly reduced ejection fraction (REDUCE LAP-HF II) : a randomised, multicentre, blinded, sham-controlled trial. / REDUCE LAP-HF II investigators.
In: The Lancet, Vol. 399, No. 10330, 19.03.2022, p. 1130-1140.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › Academic › peer-review
TY - JOUR
T1 - Atrial shunt device for heart failure with preserved and mildly reduced ejection fraction (REDUCE LAP-HF II)
T2 - a randomised, multicentre, blinded, sham-controlled trial
AU - Shah, Sanjiv J.
AU - Borlaug, Barry A.
AU - Chung, Eugene S.
AU - Cutlip, Donald E.
AU - Debonnaire, Philippe
AU - Fail, Peter S.
AU - Gao, Qi
AU - Hasenfuß, Gerd
AU - Kahwash, Rami
AU - Kaye, David M.
AU - Litwin, Sheldon E.
AU - Lurz, Philipp
AU - Massaro, Joseph M.
AU - Mohan, Rajeev C.
AU - Ricciardi, Mark J.
AU - Solomon, Scott D.
AU - Sverdlov, Aaron L.
AU - Swarup, Vijendra
AU - van Veldhuisen, Dirk J.
AU - Winkler, Sebastian
AU - Leon, Martin B.
AU - REDUCE LAP-HF II investigators
AU - Akar, Joseph
AU - Ando, Jiro
AU - Anzai, Toshihisa
AU - Asakura, Masanori
AU - Bailey, Steven
AU - Basuray, Anupam
AU - Bauer, Fabrice
AU - Bergmann, Martin
AU - Blair, John
AU - Cavendish, Jeffrey
AU - Chung, Eugene
AU - Cikes, Maja
AU - Dauber, Ira
AU - Donal, Erwan
AU - Eicher, Jean-Christophe
AU - Fail, Peter
AU - Flaherty, James
AU - Freixa, Xavier
AU - Gafoor, Sameer
AU - Gertz, Zachary
AU - Gordon, Robert
AU - Guazzi, Marco
AU - Guerrero-Miranda, Cesar
AU - Gupta, Deepak
AU - Gustafsson, Finn
AU - Hadadi, Cyrus
AU - Hakemi, Emad
AU - Handoko, Louis
AU - Hass, Moritz
AU - Hausleiter, Jorg
AU - Hayward, Christopher
AU - Hickey, Gavin
AU - Hummel, Scott
AU - Hussain, Imad
AU - Isnard, Richard
AU - Izumi, Chisato
AU - Jondeau, Guillaume
AU - Juneman, Elizabeth
AU - Kinugawa, Koichiro
AU - Kipperman, Robert
AU - Krakowiak, Bartek
AU - Krim, Selim
AU - Larned, Joshua
AU - Lewis, Gregory
AU - Lipsic, Erik
AU - Magalski, Anthony
AU - Mazimba, Sula
AU - Mazurek, Jeremy
AU - McGrady, Michele
AU - Mckenzie, Scott
AU - Mehta, Shamir
AU - Mignone, John
AU - Morsli, Hakim
AU - Nair, Ajith
AU - Noel, Thomas
AU - Orford, James
AU - Parikh, Kishan
AU - Patterson, Tiffany
AU - Penicka, Martin
AU - Petrie, Mark
AU - Pieske, Burkert
AU - Post, Martijn
AU - Raake, Philip
AU - Romero, Alicia
AU - Ryan, John
AU - Saito, Yoshihiko
AU - Sakamoto, Takafumi
AU - Sakata, Yasushi
AU - Samara, Michael
AU - Satya, Kumar
AU - Sindone, Andrew
AU - Starling, Randall
AU - Trochu, Jean-Noël
AU - Upadhya, Bharathi
AU - van der Heyden, Jan
AU - van Empel, Vanessa
AU - Varma, Amit
AU - Vest, Amanda
AU - Wengenmayer, Tobias
AU - Westenfeld, Ralf
AU - Westermann, Dirk
AU - Yamamoto, Kazuhiro
AU - Zirlik, Andreas
N1 - Funding Information: The study was funded by Corvia Medical. We thank the study participants; the study coordinators at each of the sites (listed in the appendix pp 19–21); Laura Mauri, former chair of the steering committee for the trial; Ted Feldman, former co-principal investigator for the trial; members of the Clinical Events Committee (Akshay Desai, David Gossman, Pablo Quintero, and David Thaler); and members of the Data Safety Monitoring Board (Paul Hauptman [chair], Jeffrey Feinstein, John Orav, Margaret Redfield, and Michael Rinaldi). Funding Information: SJS reports research grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH; U54 HL160273, R01 HL107577, R01 HL127028, R01 HL140731, and R01 HL149423), Actelion, AstraZeneca, Corvia, Novartis, and Pfizer; and personal fees from Abbott, Actelion, AstraZeneca, Amgen, Aria CV, Axon Therapies, Bayer, Boehringer-Ingelheim, Boston Scientific, Bristol Myers Squibb, Cardiora, Coridea, CVRx, Cyclerion, Cytokinetics, Edwards Lifesciences, Eidos, Eisai, Imara, Impulse Dynamics, Intellia, Ionis, Ironwood, Lilly, Merck, MyoKardia, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, Pfizer, Prothena, Regeneron, Rivus, Sanofi, Shifamed, Tenax, Tenaya, and United Therapeutics. BAB reports research funding from the National Institutes of Health, Axon, AstraZeneca, Corvia, Medtronic, GlaxoSmithKline, Mesoblast, Novartis, and Tenax Therapeutics; and personal fees from Actelion, Amgen, Aria, Boehringer Ingelheim, Edwards, Eli Lilly, Imbria, Janssen, Merck, Novo Nordisk, and VADovations. ESC reports personal fees from Abbott, EBR systems, Medtronic, Intershunt, LivaNova, CVRx, and Cardionomics. GH reports personal fees from AstraZeneca, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Impulse Dynamics, Novartis, Pfizer, Servier, and Vifor Pharma. RK reports personal fees from Medtronic, Impulse Dynamics, and Cardionomic. SEL reports personal fees from Axon Therapies and CVRx. PL reports research grants from Abbott Vascular, Edwards Lifesciences, and ReCor. JMM reports personal fees from Corvia. RCM reports personal fees from Pfizer, Akcea, Eidos, Alnylam, and CareDx. SDS reports research grants from Actelion, Alnylam, Amgen, AstraZeneca, Bellerophon, Bayer, Bristol Myer Squibb, Celladon, Cytokinetics, Eidos, Gilead, GlaxoSmithKline, Ionis, Lilly, Mesoblast, MyoKardia, NIH, Neurotronik, Novartis, NovoNordisk, Respicardia, Sanofi Pasteur, Theracos, and US2.AI; and personal fees from Abbott, Action, Akros, Alnylam, Amgen, Arena, AstraZeneca, Bayer, Boeringer Ingelheim, Bristol Myers Squibb, Cardior, Cardurion, Corvia, Cytokinetics, Daiichi-Sankyo, GlaxoSmithKline, Lilly, Merck, Myokardia, Novartis, Roche, Theracos, Quantum Genomics, Cardurion, Janssen, Cardiac Dimensions, Tenaya, Sanofi-Pasteur, Dinaqor, Tremeau, CellProThera, Moderna, American Regent, Sarepta, Lexicon, Anacardio, Akros, PureHealth. ALS reports research grants from the National Heart Foundation of Australia Future Leader Fellowships (#101918 & 106025), NSW Health (Australia), Biotronik, RACE Oncology, Bristol Myer Squibb, Roche Diagnostics, and Vifor; and personal fees from Novartis, Bayer, Bristol Myer Squibb, AstraZeneca, and Boehringer Ingelheim. VS reports personal fees from Abbott Laboratories and Boston Scientific. SW reports personal fees from Novartis, AstraZeneca, and Bayer. MBL reports institutional research grants from Abbott, Boston Scientific, Edwards LifeSciences, and Medtronic. All other authors declare no competing interests. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2022/3/19
Y1 - 2022/3/19
N2 - 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 (pinteraction=0·002 [>70 mm Hg associated with worse outcomes]), right atrial volume index (pinteraction=0·012 [≥29·7 mL/m2, worse outcomes]), and sex (pinteraction=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%. Funding: Corvia Medical.
AB - 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 (pinteraction=0·002 [>70 mm Hg associated with worse outcomes]), right atrial volume index (pinteraction=0·012 [≥29·7 mL/m2, worse outcomes]), and sex (pinteraction=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%. Funding: Corvia Medical.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85124871462&origin=inward
UR - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35120593
U2 - 10.1016/S0140-6736(22)00016-2
DO - 10.1016/S0140-6736(22)00016-2
M3 - Article
C2 - 35120593
VL - 399
SP - 1130
EP - 1140
JO - Lancet
JF - Lancet
SN - 0140-6736
IS - 10330
ER -