Browsing by Author "Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140)"
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Publication Acute heart failure and valvular heart disease: A scientific statement of the Heart Failure Association, the Association for Acute CardioVascular Care and the European Association of Percutaneous Cardiovascular Interventions of the European Society of Cardiology(2023) ;Chioncel, Ovidiu (12769077100) ;Adamo, Marianna (56113383300) ;Nikolaou, Maria (36915428200) ;Parissis, John (7004855782) ;Mebazaa, Alexandre (57210091243) ;Yilmaz, Mehmet Birhan (7202595585) ;Hassager, Christian (7005846737) ;Moura, Brenda (6602544591) ;Bauersachs, Johann (7004626054) ;Harjola, Veli-Pekka (6602728533) ;Antohi, Elena-Laura (57201067583) ;Ben-Gal, Tuvia (7003448638) ;Collins, Sean P. (7402535524) ;Iliescu, Vlad Anton (6601988960) ;Abdelhamid, Magdy (57069808700) ;Čelutkienė, Jelena (6507133552) ;Adamopoulos, Stamatis (55399885400) ;Lund, Lars H. (7102206508) ;Cicoira, Mariantonietta (7003362045) ;Masip, Josep (57221962429) ;Skouri, Hadi (21934953600) ;Gustafsson, Finn (7005115957) ;Rakisheva, Amina (57196007935) ;Ahrens, Ingo (6602270919) ;Mortara, Andrea (7005821770) ;Janowska, Ewa A. (57682291000) ;Almaghraby, Abdallah (56820237700) ;Damman, Kevin (8677384800) ;Miro, Oscar (7004945768) ;Huber, Kurt (35376715600) ;Ristic, Arsen (7003835406) ;Hill, Loreena (56572076500) ;Mullens, Wilfried (55916359500) ;Chieffo, Alaide (57202041611) ;Bartunek, Jozef (7006397762) ;Paolisso, Pasquale (55331305300) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;Anker, Stefan D. (57783017100) ;Price, Susanna (7202475463) ;Filippatos, Gerasimos (57396841000) ;Ruschitzka, Frank (7003359126) ;Seferovic, Petar (6603594879) ;Vidal-Perez, Rafael (25724804500) ;Vahanian, Alec (16158858700) ;Metra, Marco (7006770735) ;McDonagh, Theresa A. (7003332406) ;Barbato, Emanuele (58118036500) ;Coats, Andrew J.S. (35395386900)Rosano, Giuseppe M.C. (7007131876)Acute heart failure (AHF) represents a broad spectrum of disease states, resulting from the interaction between an acute precipitant and a patient's underlying cardiac substrate and comorbidities. Valvular heart disease (VHD) is frequently associated with AHF. AHF may result from several precipitants that add an acute haemodynamic stress superimposed on a chronic valvular lesion or may occur as a consequence of a new significant valvular lesion. Regardless of the mechanism, clinical presentation may vary from acute decompensated heart failure to cardiogenic shock. Assessing the severity of VHD as well as the correlation between VHD severity and symptoms may be difficult in patients with AHF because of the rapid variation in loading conditions, concomitant destabilization of the associated comorbidities and the presence of combined valvular lesions. Evidence-based interventions targeting VHD in settings of AHF have yet to be identified, as patients with severe VHD are often excluded from randomized trials in AHF, so results from these trials do not generalize to those with VHD. Furthermore, there are not rigorously conducted randomized controlled trials in the setting of VHD and AHF, most of the data coming from observational studies. Thus, distinct to chronic settings, current guidelines are very elusive when patients with severe VHD present with AHF, and a clear-cut strategy could not be yet defined. Given the paucity of evidence in this subset of AHF patients, the aim of this scientific statement is to describe the epidemiology, pathophysiology, and overall treatment approach for patients with VHD who present with AHF. © 2023 European Society of Cardiology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Biomarkers for the prediction of heart failure and cardiovascular events in patients with type 2 diabetes: a position statement from the Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology(2022) ;Seferović, Peter (6603594879) ;Farmakis, Dimitrios (55296706200) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;Gal, Tuvia Ben (7003448638) ;Böhm, Michael (35392235500) ;Chioncel, Ovidiu (12769077100) ;Ferrari, Roberto (36047514600) ;Filippatos, Gerasimos (7003787662) ;Hill, Loreena (56572076500) ;Jankowska, Ewa (21640520500) ;Lainscak, Mitja (9739432000) ;Lopatin, Yuri (59263990100) ;Lund, Lars H. (7102206508) ;Mebazaa, Alexandre (57210091243) ;Metra, Marco (7006770735) ;Moura, Brenda (6602544591) ;Rosano, Giuseppe (7007131876) ;Thum, Thomas (57195743477) ;Voors, Adriaan (7006380706)Coats, Andrew J.S. (35395386900)Knowledge on risk predictors of incident heart failure (HF) in patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D) is crucial given the frequent coexistence of the two conditions and the fact that T2D doubles the risk of incident HF. In addition, HF is increasingly being recognized as an important endpoint in trials in T2D. On the other hand, the diagnostic and prognostic performance of established cardiovascular biomarkers may be modified by the presence of T2D. The present position paper, derived by an expert panel workshop organized by the Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology, summarizes the current knowledge and gaps in evidence regarding the use of a series of different biomarkers, reflecting various pathogenic pathways, for the prediction of incident HF and cardiovascular events in patients with T2D and in those with established HF and T2D. © 2022 European Society of Cardiology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Cardiac remodelling – Part 2: Clinical, imaging and laboratory findings. A review from the Study Group on Biomarkers of the Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology(2022) ;Aimo, Alberto (56112889900) ;Vergaro, Giuseppe (23111620200) ;González, Arantxa (57191823224) ;Barison, Andrea (24597524200) ;Lupón, Josep (57214510665) ;Delgado, Victoria (24172709900) ;Richards, A Mark (7402299599) ;de Boer, Rudolf A. (8572907800) ;Thum, Thomas (57195743477) ;Arfsten, Henrike (57192299905) ;Hülsmann, Martin (7006719269) ;Falcao-Pires, Inês (12771795000) ;Díez, Javier (7201552601) ;Foo, Roger S.Y. (14419910700) ;Chan, Mark Yan Yee (23388249600) ;Anene-Nzelu, Chukwuemeka G. (36717287000) ;Abdelhamid, Magdy (57069808700) ;Adamopoulos, Stamatis (55399885400) ;Anker, Stefan D. (56223993400) ;Belenkov, Yuri (7006528098) ;Gal, Tuvia B. (7003448638) ;Cohen-Solal, Alain (57189610711) ;Böhm, Michael (35392235500) ;Chioncel, Ovidiu (12769077100) ;Jankowska, Ewa A. (21640520500) ;Gustafsson, Finn (7005115957) ;Hill, Loreena (56572076500) ;Jaarsma, Tiny (56962769200) ;Januzzi, James L. (7003533511) ;Jhund, Pardeep (6506826363) ;Lopatin, Yuri (59263990100) ;Lund, Lars H. (7102206508) ;Metra, Marco (7006770735) ;Milicic, Davor (56503365500) ;Moura, Brenda (6602544591) ;Mueller, Christian (57638261900) ;Mullens, Wilfried (55916359500) ;Núñez, Julio (57201547451) ;Piepoli, Massimo F. (7005292730) ;Rakisheva, Amina (57196007935) ;Ristić, Arsen D. (7003835406) ;Rossignol, Patrick (7006015976) ;Savarese, Gianluigi (36189499900) ;Tocchetti, Carlo G. (6507913481) ;van Linthout, Sophie (6602562561) ;Volterrani, Maurizio (7004062259) ;Seferovic, Petar (6603594879) ;Rosano, Giuseppe (7007131876) ;Coats, Andrew J.S. (35395386900) ;Emdin, Michele (7005694410)Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140)In patients with heart failure, the beneficial effects of drug and device therapies counteract to some extent ongoing cardiac damage. According to the net balance between these two factors, cardiac geometry and function may improve (reverse remodelling, RR) and even completely normalize (remission), or vice versa progressively deteriorate (adverse remodelling, AR). RR or remission predict a better prognosis, while AR has been associated with worsening clinical status and outcomes. The remodelling process ultimately involves all cardiac chambers, but has been traditionally evaluated in terms of left ventricular volumes and ejection fraction. This is the second part of a review paper by the Study Group on Biomarkers of the Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology dedicated to ventricular remodelling. This document examines the proposed criteria to diagnose RR and AR, their prevalence and prognostic value, and the variables predicting remodelling in patients managed according to current guidelines. Much attention will be devoted to RR in patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction because most studies on cardiac remodelling focused on this setting. © 2022 European Society of Cardiology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Cardiopoietic cell therapy for advanced ischaemic heart failure: Results at 39 weeks of the prospective, randomized, double blind, sham-controlled CHART-1 clinical trial(2017) ;Bartunek, Jozef (7006397762) ;Terzic, Andre (7004939597) ;Davison, Beth A. (7102616573) ;Filippatos, Gerasimos S. (7003787662) ;Radovanovic, Slavica (24492602300) ;Beleslin, Branko (6701355424) ;Merkely, Bela (7004434435) ;Musialek, Piotr (6602191124) ;Wojakowski, Wojciech (55937490100) ;Andreka, Peter (6602739546) ;Horvath, Ivan G. (35315794200) ;Katz, Amos (7402569337) ;Dolatabadi, Dariouch (6508388377) ;El Nakadi, Badih (6603603243) ;Arandjelovic, Aleksandra (8603366600) ;Edes, Istvan (7003689191) ;Seferovic, Petar M. (6603594879) ;Obradovic, Slobodan (6701778019) ;Vanderheyden, Marc (7003468696) ;Jagic, Nikola (11641086000) ;Petrov, Ivo (56204260300) ;Atar, Shaul (7003487445) ;Halabi, Majdi (13008501300) ;Gelev, Valeri L. (15832032700) ;Shochat, Michael K. (8916466700) ;Kasprzak, Jaroslaw D. (35452933600) ;Sanz-Ruiz, Ricardo (24451341300) ;Heyndrickx, Guy R. (7006188682) ;Nyolczas, Noemi (24388812000) ;Legrand, Victor (7005354273) ;Guédès, Antoine (7004710124) ;Heyse, Alex (7801320602) ;Moccetti, Tiziano (55632940300) ;Fernandez-Aviles, Francisco (7006121046) ;Jimenez-Quevedo, Pilar (8873531300) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;Hernandez-Garcia, Jose Maria (57189234598) ;Ribichini, Flavio (7003741814) ;Gruchala, Marcin (6602138765) ;Waldman, Scott A. (7102179927) ;Teerlink, John R. (55234545700) ;Gersh, Bernard J. (35371853600) ;Povsic, Thomas J. (57207517008) ;Henry, Timothy D. (7102043625) ;Metra, Marco (7006770735) ;Hajjar, Roger J. (19134434400) ;Tendera, Michal (7005482361) ;Behfar, Atta (6602328079) ;Alexandre, Bertrand (57193733544) ;Seron, Aymeric (12786420500) ;Stough, Wendy Gattis (10341323900) ;Sherman, Warren (57211674521) ;Cotter, Gad (57985372400)Wijns, William (7006420435)Aims Cardiopoietic cells, produced through cardiogenic conditioning of patients' mesenchymal stem cells, have shown preliminary efficacy. The Congestive Heart Failure Cardiopoietic Regenerative Therapy (CHART-1) trial aimed to validate cardiopoiesis-based biotherapy in a larger heart failure cohort. Methods and results This multinational, randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled study was conducted in 39 hospitals. Patients with symptomatic ischaemic heart failure on guideline-directed therapy (n= 484) were screened; n = 348 underwent bone marrow harvest and mesenchymal stem cell expansion. Those achieving> 24 million mesenchymal stem cells (n=315) were randomized to cardiopoietic cells delivered endomyocardially with a retention-enhanced catheter (n=157) or sham procedure (n= 158). Procedures were performed as randomized in 271 patients (n = 120 cardiopoietic cells, n= 151 sham). The primary efficacy endpoint was a Finkelstein Schoenfeld hierarchical composite (all-cause mortality, worsening heart failure, Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire score, 6-min walk distance, left ventricular end-systolic volume, and ejection fraction) at 39 weeks. The primary outcome was neutral (Mann Whitney estimator 0.54, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.47 0.61 [value> 0.5 favours cell treatment], P = 0.27). Exploratory analyses suggested a benefit of cell treatment on the primary composite in patients with baseline left ventricular end-diastolic volume 200-370mL (60% of patients) (Mann Whitney estimator 0.61, 95% CI 0.52-0.70, P = 0.015). No difference was observed in serious adverse events. One (0.9%) cardiopoietic cell patient and 9 (5.4%) sham patients experienced aborted or sudden cardiac death. Conclusion The primary endpoint was neutral, with safety demonstrated across the cohort. Further evaluation of cardiopoietic cell therapy in patients with elevated end-diastolic volume is warranted. © The Author 2016. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Circulating heart failure biomarkers beyond natriuretic peptides: review from the Biomarker Study Group of the Heart Failure Association (HFA), European Society of Cardiology (ESC)(2021) ;Meijers, Wouter C. (56085653000) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;Mebazaa, Alexandre (57210091243) ;Bauersachs, Johann (7004626054) ;Cleland, John G.F. (7202164137) ;Coats, Andrew J.S. (35395386900) ;Januzzi, James L. (7003533511) ;Maisel, Alan S. (7004795386) ;McDonald, Kenneth (57203044348) ;Mueller, Thomas (59662788800) ;Richards, A. Mark (7402299599) ;Seferovic, Petar (6603594879) ;Mueller, Christian (57638261900)de Boer, Rudolf A. (8572907800)New biomarkers are being evaluated for their ability to advance the management of patients with heart failure. Despite a large pool of interesting candidate biomarkers, besides natriuretic peptides virtually none have succeeded in being applied into the clinical setting. In this review, we examine the most promising emerging candidates for clinical assessment and management of patients with heart failure. We discuss high-sensitivity cardiac troponins (Tn), procalcitonin, novel kidney markers, soluble suppression of tumorigenicity 2 (sST2), galectin-3, growth differentiation factor-15 (GDF-15), cluster of differentiation 146 (CD146), neprilysin, adrenomedullin (ADM), and also discuss proteomics and genetic-based risk scores. We focused on guidance and assistance with daily clinical care decision-making. For each biomarker, analytical considerations are discussed, as well as performance regarding diagnosis and prognosis. Furthermore, we discuss potential implementation in clinical algorithms and in ongoing clinical trials. © 2021 The Authors. European Journal of Heart Failure published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Cardiology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Common mechanistic pathways in cancer and heart failure. A scientific roadmap on behalf of the Translational Research Committee of the Heart Failure Association (HFA) of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC)(2020) ;de Boer, Rudolf A. (8572907800) ;Hulot, Jean-Sébastien (6603026259) ;Tocchetti, Carlo Gabriele (6507913481) ;Aboumsallem, Joseph Pierre (57195371732) ;Ameri, Pietro (17342143000) ;Anker, Stefan D. (56223993400) ;Bauersachs, Johann (7004626054) ;Bertero, Edoardo (57189520921) ;Coats, Andrew J.S. (35395386900) ;Čelutkienė, Jelena (6507133552) ;Chioncel, Ovidiu (12769077100) ;Dodion, Pierre (57205178617) ;Eschenhagen, Thomas (7004716470) ;Farmakis, Dimitrios (55296706200) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;Jäger, Dirk (7005584966) ;Jankowska, Ewa A. (21640520500) ;Kitsis, Richard N. (7003793631) ;Konety, Suma H. (8271066700) ;Larkin, James (8762665400) ;Lehmann, Lorenz (15760419100) ;Lenihan, Daniel J. (7003853556) ;Maack, Christoph (6701763468) ;Moslehi, Javid J. (6602839476) ;Müller, Oliver J. (57213328662) ;Nowak-Sliwinska, Patrycja (6506106323) ;Piepoli, Massimo Francesco (7005292730) ;Ponikowski, Piotr (7005331011) ;Pudil, Radek (57210201747) ;Rainer, Peter P. (35590576100) ;Ruschitzka, Frank (7003359126) ;Sawyer, Douglas (7201550571) ;Seferovic, Petar M. (6603594879) ;Suter, Thomas (7006001704) ;Thum, Thomas (57195743477) ;van der Meer, Peter (7004669395) ;Van Laake, Linda W. (9533995100) ;von Haehling, Stephan (6602981479) ;Heymans, Stephane (6603326423) ;Lyon, Alexander R. (57203046227)Backs, Johannes (6506659543)The co-occurrence of cancer and heart failure (HF) represents a significant clinical drawback as each disease interferes with the treatment of the other. In addition to shared risk factors, a growing body of experimental and clinical evidence reveals numerous commonalities in the biology underlying both pathologies. Inflammation emerges as a common hallmark for both diseases as it contributes to the initiation and progression of both HF and cancer. Under stress, malignant and cardiac cells change their metabolic preferences to survive, which makes these metabolic derangements a great basis to develop intersection strategies and therapies to combat both diseases. Furthermore, genetic predisposition and clonal haematopoiesis are common drivers for both conditions and they hold great clinical relevance in the context of personalized medicine. Additionally, altered angiogenesis is a common hallmark for failing hearts and tumours and represents a promising substrate to target in both diseases. Cardiac cells and malignant cells interact with their surrounding environment called stroma. This interaction mediates the progression of the two pathologies and understanding the structure and function of each stromal component may pave the way for innovative therapeutic strategies and improved outcomes in patients. The interdisciplinary collaboration between cardiologists and oncologists is essential to establish unified guidelines. To this aim, pre-clinical models that mimic the human situation, where both pathologies coexist, are needed to understand all the aspects of the bidirectional relationship between cancer and HF. Finally, adequately powered clinical studies, including patients from all ages, and men and women, with proper adjudication of both cancer and cardiovascular endpoints, are essential to accurately study these two pathologies at the same time. © 2020 The Authors. European Journal of Heart Failure published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Cardiology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Congestion in heart failure: a circulating biomarker-based perspective. A review from the Biomarkers Working Group of the Heart Failure Association, European Society of Cardiology(2022) ;Núñez, Julio (57201547451) ;de la Espriella, Rafael (57219980090) ;Rossignol, Patrick (7006015976) ;Voors, Adriaan A. (7006380706) ;Mullens, Wilfried (55916359500) ;Metra, Marco (7006770735) ;Chioncel, Ovidiu (12769077100) ;Januzzi, James L. (7003533511) ;Mueller, Christian (57638261900) ;Richards, A. Mark (7402299599) ;de Boer, Rudolf A. (8572907800) ;Thum, Thomas (57195743477) ;Arfsten, Henrike (57192299905) ;González, Arantxa (57191823224) ;Abdelhamid, Magdy (57069808700) ;Adamopoulos, Stamatis (55399885400) ;Anker, Stefan D. (57783017100) ;Gal, Tuvia Ben (7003448638) ;Biegus, Jan (6506094842) ;Cohen-Solal, Alain (57189610711) ;Böhm, Michael (35392235500) ;Emdin, Michele (7005694410) ;Jankowska, Ewa A. (21640520500) ;Gustafsson, Finn (7005115957) ;Hill, Loreena (56572076500) ;Jaarsma, Tiny (56962769200) ;Jhund, Pardeep S. (6506826363) ;Lopatin, Yuri (59263990100) ;Lund, Lars H. (7102206508) ;Milicic, Davor (56503365500) ;Moura, Brenda (6602544591) ;Piepoli, Massimo F. (7005292730) ;Ponikowski, Piotr (7005331011) ;Rakisheva, Amina (57196007935) ;Ristic, Arsen (7003835406) ;Savarese, Gianluigi (36189499900) ;Tocchetti, Carlo G. (6507913481) ;Van Linthout, Sophie (6602562561) ;Volterrani, Maurizio (7004062259) ;Seferovic, Petar (6603594879) ;Rosano, Giuseppe (7007131876) ;Coats, Andrew J.S. (35395386900)Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140)Congestion is a cardinal sign of heart failure (HF). In the past, it was seen as a homogeneous epiphenomenon that identified patients with advanced HF. However, current evidence shows that congestion in HF varies in quantity and distribution. This updated view advocates for a congestive-driven classification of HF according to onset (acute vs. chronic), regional distribution (systemic vs. pulmonary), compartment of distribution (intravascular vs. extravascular), and clinical vs. subclinical. Thus, this review will focus on the utility of circulating biomarkers for assessing and managing the different fluid overload phenotypes. This discussion focused on the clinical utility of the natriuretic peptides, carbohydrate antigen 125 (also called mucin 16), bio-adrenomedullin and mid-regional pro-adrenomedullin, ST2 (also known as interleukin-1 receptor-like 1), cluster of differentiation 146, troponin, C-terminal pro-endothelin-1, and parameters of haemoconcentration. The utility of circulation biomarkers on top of clinical evaluation, haemodynamics, and imaging needs to be better determined by dedicated studies. Some multiparametric frameworks in which these tools contribute to management are proposed. © 2022 European Society of Cardiology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication COVID-19 vaccination in patients with heart failure: a position paper of the Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology(2021) ;Rosano, Giuseppe (7007131876) ;Jankowska, Ewa A. (21640520500) ;Ray, Robin (57194275026) ;Metra, Marco (7006770735) ;Abdelhamid, Magdy (57069808700) ;Adamopoulos, Stamatis (55399885400) ;Anker, Stefan D. (56223993400) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;Belenkov, Yury (7006528098) ;Gal, Tuvia B. (7003448638) ;Böhm, Michael (35392235500) ;Chioncel, Ovidiu (12769077100) ;Cohen-Solal, Alain (57189610711) ;Farmakis, Dimitrios (55296706200) ;Filippatos, Gerasimos (7003787662) ;González, Arantxa (57191823224) ;Gustafsson, Finn (7005115957) ;Hill, Loreena (56572076500) ;Jaarsma, Tiny (56962769200) ;Jouhra, Fadi (23990659300) ;Lainscak, Mitja (9739432000) ;Lambrinou, Ekaterini (9039387200) ;Lopatin, Yury (6601956122) ;Lund, Lars H. (7102206508) ;Milicic, Davor (56503365500) ;Moura, Brenda (6602544591) ;Mullens, Wilfried (55916359500) ;Piepoli, Massimo F. (7005292730) ;Ponikowski, Piotr (7005331011) ;Rakisheva, Amina (57196007935) ;Ristic, Arsen (7003835406) ;Savarese, Gianluigi (36189499900) ;Seferovic, Petar (6603594879) ;Senni, Michele (7003359867) ;Thum, Thomas (57195743477) ;Tocchetti, Carlo G. (6507913481) ;Van Linthout, Sophie (6602562561) ;Volterrani, Maurizio (7004062259)Coats, Andrew J.S. (35395386900)Patients with heart failure (HF) who contract SARS-CoV-2 infection are at a higher risk of cardiovascular and non-cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Regardless of therapeutic attempts in COVID-19, vaccination remains the most promising global approach at present for controlling this disease. There are several concerns and misconceptions regarding the clinical indications, optimal mode of delivery, safety and efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines for patients with HF. This document provides guidance to all healthcare professionals regarding the implementation of a COVID-19 vaccination scheme in patients with HF. COVID-19 vaccination is indicated in all patients with HF, including those who are immunocompromised (e.g. after heart transplantation receiving immunosuppressive therapy) and with frailty syndrome. It is preferable to vaccinate against COVID-19 patients with HF in an optimal clinical state, which would include clinical stability, adequate hydration and nutrition, optimized treatment of HF and other comorbidities (including iron deficiency), but corrective measures should not be allowed to delay vaccination. Patients with HF who have been vaccinated against COVID-19 need to continue precautionary measures, including the use of facemasks, hand hygiene and social distancing. Knowledge on strategies preventing SARS-CoV-2 infection (including the COVID-19 vaccination) should be included in the comprehensive educational programmes delivered to patients with HF. © 2021 European Society of Cardiology - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Heart failure and diabetes: Metabolic alterations and therapeutic interventions: A state-of-The-Art review from the Translational Research Committee of the Heart Failure Association-European Society of Cardiology(2018) ;Maack, Christoph (6701763468) ;Lehrke, Michael (57203333460) ;Backs, Johannes (6506659543) ;Heinzel, Frank R. (7005851989) ;Hulot, Jean-Sebastien (6603026259) ;Marx, Nikolaus (57203048581) ;Paulus, Walter J. (7201614091) ;Rossignol, Patrick (7006015976) ;Taegtmeyer, Heinrich (7102044748) ;Bauersachs, Johann (7004626054) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;Brutsaert, Dirk (7006117073) ;Bugger, Heiko (22233449600) ;Clarke, Kieran (35476630000) ;Cosentino, Francesco (7006332266) ;De Keulenaer, Gilles (6603078918) ;Cas, Alessandra Dei (18233496100) ;González, Arantxa (57191823224) ;Huelsmann, Martin (7006719269) ;Iaccarino, Guido (57221543508) ;Lunde, Ida Gjervold (17346352100) ;Lyon, Alexander R (57203046227) ;Pollesello, Piero (7004881964) ;Rena, Graham (6603702420) ;Riksen, Niels P (6603036752) ;Rosano, Giuseppe (7007131876) ;Staels, Bart (7102139355) ;Van Laake, Linda W. (9533995100) ;Wanner, Christoph (57212349814) ;Farmakis, Dimitrios (55296706200) ;Filippatos, Gerasimos (7003787662) ;Ruschitzka, Frank (7003359126) ;Seferovic, Petar (6603594879) ;De Boer, Rudolf A. (8572907800)Heymans, Stephane (6603326423)[No abstract available] - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Heart failure and obesity: Translational approaches and therapeutic perspectives. A scientific statement of the Heart Failure Association of the ESC(2025) ;Savarese, Gianluigi (36189499900) ;Schiattarella, Gabriele G. (16029615600) ;Lindberg, Felix (57451813800) ;Anker, Markus S. (35763654100) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;Bäck, Magnus (7006363185) ;Braunschweig, Frieder (6602194306) ;Bucciarelli-Ducci, Chiara (18534251300) ;Butler, Javed (57203521637) ;Cannata, Antonio (56950331100) ;Capone, Federico (57188624879) ;Chioncel, Ovidiu (12769077100) ;D'Elia, Emilia (40660899000) ;González, Arantxa (57191823224) ;Filippatos, Gerasimos (7003787662) ;Girerd, Nicolas (23027379700) ;Hulot, Jean-Sébastien (6603026259) ;Lam, Carolyn S.P. (19934204100) ;Lund, Lars H. (7102206508) ;Maack, Christoph (6701763468) ;Moura, Brenda (6602544591) ;Petrie, Mark C. (7006426382) ;Piepoli, Massimo (7005292730) ;Shehab, Abdullah (6603838351) ;Yilmaz, Mehmet B. (7202595585) ;Seferovic, Peter (59774002200) ;Tocchetti, Carlo G. (6507913481) ;Rosano, Giuseppe M.C. (7007131876)Metra, Marco (7006770735)Obesity and heart failure (HF) represent two growing pandemics. In the general population, obesity affects one in eight adults and is linked with an increased risk for HF. Obesity is even more common in patients with HF, where it complicates the diagnosis of HF and is linked with worse symptoms and impaired exercise capacity. Over the past few years, new evidence on the mechanisms linking obesity with HF has been reported, particularly in relation to HF with preserved ejection fraction. Novel therapies inducing weight loss appear to have favourable effects on health status and cardiovascular risk. Against the backdrop of this rapidly evolving evidence landscape, HF clinicians are increasingly required to tailor their preventive, diagnostic, and therapeutic approaches to HF in the presence of obesity. This scientific statement by the Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology provides an up-to-date summary on obesity in HF, covering key areas such as epidemiology, translational aspects, diagnostic challenges, therapeutic approaches, and trial design. © 2025 The Author(s). European Journal of Heart Failure published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Cardiology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology practical guidance on the use of natriuretic peptide concentrations(2019) ;Mueller, Christian (57638261900) ;McDonald, Kenneth (57203044348) ;de Boer, Rudolf A. (8572907800) ;Maisel, Alan (7004795386) ;Cleland, John G.F. (7202164137) ;Kozhuharov, Nikola (57113678800) ;Coats, Andrew J.S. (35395386900) ;Metra, Marco (7006770735) ;Mebazaa, Alexandre (57210091243) ;Ruschitzka, Frank (7003359126) ;Lainscak, Mitja (9739432000) ;Filippatos, Gerasimos (7003787662) ;Seferovic, Petar M. (6603594879) ;Meijers, Wouter C. (56085653000) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;Mueller, Thomas (59662788800) ;Richards, Mark (7402299599)Januzzi, James L. (7003533511)Natriuretic peptide [NP; B-type NP (BNP), N-terminal proBNP (NT-proBNP), and midregional proANP (MR-proANP)] concentrations are quantitative plasma biomarkers for the presence and severity of haemodynamic cardiac stress and heart failure (HF). End-diastolic wall stress, intracardiac filling pressures, and intracardiac volumes seem to be the dominant triggers. This paper details the most important indications for NPs and highlights 11 key principles underlying their clinical use shown below. NPs should always be used in conjunction with all other clinical information. NPs are reasonable surrogates for intracardiac volumes and filling pressures. NPs should be measured in all patients presenting with symptoms suggestive of HF such as dyspnoea and/or fatigue, as their use facilitates the early diagnosis and risk stratification of HF. NPs have very high diagnostic accuracy in discriminating HF from other causes of dyspnoea: the higher the NP, the higher the likelihood that dyspnoea is caused by HF. Optimal NP cut-off concentrations for the diagnosis of acute HF (very high filling pressures) in patients presenting to the emergency department with acute dyspnoea are higher compared with those used in the diagnosis of chronic HF in patients with dyspnoea on exertion (mild increase in filling pressures at rest). Obese patients have lower NP concentrations, mandating the use of lower cut-off concentrations (about 50% lower). In stable HF patients, but also in patients with other cardiac disorders such as myocardial infarction, valvular heart disease, atrial fibrillation or pulmonary embolism, NP concentrations have high prognostic accuracy for death and HF hospitalization. Screening with NPs for the early detection of relevant cardiac disease including left ventricular systolic dysfunction in patients with cardiovascular risk factors may help to identify patients at increased risk, therefore allowing targeted preventive measures to prevent HF. BNP, NT-proBNP and MR-proANP have comparable diagnostic and prognostic accuracy. In patients with shock, NPs cannot be used to identify cause (e.g. cardiogenic vs. septic shock), but remain prognostic. NPs cannot identify the underlying cause of HF and, therefore, if elevated, must always be used in conjunction with cardiac imaging. © 2019 The Authors. European Journal of Heart Failure © 2019 European Society of Cardiology - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Hyponatraemia and changes in natraemia during hospitalization for acute heart failure and associations with in-hospital and long-term outcomes – from the ESC-HFA EORP Heart Failure Long-Term Registry(2023) ;Kapłon-Cieślicka, Agnieszka (25960808100) ;Benson, Lina (36924461300) ;Chioncel, Ovidiu (12769077100) ;Crespo-Leiro, Maria G. (35401291200) ;Coats, Andrew J.S. (35395386900) ;Anker, Stefan D. (57783017100) ;Ruschitzka, Frank (7003359126) ;Hage, Camilla (26433468300) ;Drożdż, Jarosław (15519446200) ;Seferovic, Petar (6603594879) ;Rosano, Giuseppe M.C. (7007131876) ;Piepoli, Massimo (7005292730) ;Mebazaa, Alexandre (57210091243) ;McDonagh, Theresa (7003332406) ;Lainscak, Mitja (9739432000) ;Savarese, Gianluigi (36189499900) ;Ferrari, Roberto (57645210500) ;Mullens, Wilfried (55916359500) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;Maggioni, Aldo P. (57203255222)Lund, Lars H. (7102206508)Aims: To comprehensively assess hyponatraemia in acute heart failure (AHF) regarding prevalence, associations, hospital course, and post-discharge outcomes. Methods and results: Of 8298 patients in the European Society of Cardiology Heart Failure Long-Term Registry hospitalized for AHF with any ejection fraction, 20% presented with hyponatraemia (serum sodium <135 mmol/L). Independent predictors included lower systolic blood pressure, estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) and haemoglobin, along with diabetes, hepatic disease, use of thiazide diuretics, mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists, digoxin, higher doses of loop diuretics, and non-use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors/angiotensin receptor blockers and beta-blockers. In-hospital death occurred in 3.3%. The prevalence of hyponatraemia and in-hospital mortality with different combinations were: 9% hyponatraemia both at admission and discharge (hyponatraemia Yes/Yes, in-hospital mortality 6.9%), 11% Yes/No (in-hospital mortality 4.9%), 8% No/Yes (in-hospital mortality 4.7%), and 72% No/No (in-hospital mortality 2.4%). Correction of hyponatraemia was associated with improvement in eGFR. In-hospital development of hyponatraemia was associated with greater diuretic use and worsening eGFR but also more effective decongestion. Among hospital survivors, 12-month mortality was 19% and adjusted hazard ratios (95% confidence intervals) were for hyponatraemia Yes/Yes 1.60 (1.35–1.89), Yes/No 1.35 (1.14–1.59), and No/Yes 1.18 (0.96–1.45). For death or heart failure hospitalization they were 1.38 (1.21–1.58), 1.17 (1.02–1.33), and 1.09 (0.93–1.27), respectively. Conclusion: Among patients with AHF, 20% had hyponatraemia at admission, which was associated with more advanced heart failure and normalized in half of patients during hospitalization. Admission hyponatraemia (possibly dilutional), especially if it did not resolve, was associated with worse in-hospital and post-discharge outcomes. Hyponatraemia developing during hospitalization (possibly depletional) was associated with lower risk. © 2023 The Authors. European Journal of Heart Failure published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Cardiology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Impact analysis of heart failure across European countries: an ESC-HFA position paper(2022) ;Rosano, Giuseppe M.C. (7007131876) ;Seferovic, Petar (6603594879) ;Savarese, Gianluigi (36189499900) ;Spoletini, Ilaria (14830856100) ;Lopatin, Yuri (59263990100) ;Gustafsson, Fin (7005115957) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;Jaarsma, Tiny (56962769200) ;Abdelhamid, Magdy (57069808700) ;Miqueo, Arantxa Gonzalez (57222568819) ;Piepoli, Massimo (7005292730) ;Tocchetti, Carlo G. (6507913481) ;Ristić, Arsen D. (7003835406) ;Jankowska, Ewa (21640520500) ;Moura, Brenda (6602544591) ;Hill, Loreena (56572076500) ;Filippatos, Gerasimos (57396841000) ;Metra, Marco (7006770735) ;Milicic, Davor (56503365500) ;Thum, Thomas (57195743477) ;Chioncel, Ovidiu (12769077100) ;Ben Gal, Tuvia (7003448638) ;Lund, Lars H. (7102206508) ;Farmakis, Dimitrios (55296706200) ;Mullens, Wilfried (55916359500) ;Adamopoulos, Stamatis (55399885400) ;Bohm, Michael (35392235500) ;Norhammar, Anna (6603204971) ;Bollmann, Andreas (7003870797) ;Banerjee, Amitava (57208560645) ;Maggioni, Aldo P. (57203255222) ;Voors, Adriaan (7006380706) ;Solal, Alain Cohen (57189610711)Coats, Andrew J.S. (35395386900)Heart failure (HF) is a long-term clinical syndrome, with increasing prevalence and considerable healthcare costs that are further expected to increase dramatically. Despite significant advances in therapy and prevention, mortality and morbidity remain high and quality of life poor. Epidemiological data, that is, prevalence, incidence, mortality, and morbidity, show geographical variations across the European countries, depending on differences in aetiology, clinical characteristics, and treatment. However, data on the prevalence of the disease are scarce, as are those on quality of life. For these reasons, the ESC-HFA has developed a position paper to comprehensively assess our understanding of the burden of HF in Europe, in order to guide future policies for this syndrome. This manuscript will discuss the available epidemiological data on HF prevalence, outcomes, and human costs—in terms of quality of life—in European countries. © 2022 The Authors. ESC Heart Failure published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Cardiology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Incidence, risk assessment and prevention of sudden cardiac death in cardiomyopathies(2023) ;Polovina, Marija (35273422300) ;Tschöpe, Carsten (7003819329) ;Rosano, Giuseppe (7007131876) ;Metra, Marco (7006770735) ;Crea, Filippo (57213692073) ;Mullens, Wilfried (55916359500) ;Bauersachs, Johann (7004626054) ;Sliwa, Karen (57207223988) ;de Boer, Rudolf A. (8572907800) ;Farmakis, Dimitrios (55296706200) ;Thum, Thomas (57195743477) ;Corrado, Domenico (7004549983) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;Bozkurt, Biykem (7004172442) ;Filippatos, Gerasimos (57396841000) ;Keren, Andre (7005620132) ;Skouri, Hadi (21934953600) ;Moura, Brenda (6602544591) ;Volterrani, Maurizio (7004062259) ;Abdelhamid, Magdy (57069808700) ;Ašanin, Milika (8603366900) ;Krljanac, Gordana (8947929900) ;Tomić, Milenko (58629586600) ;Savarese, Gianluigi (36189499900) ;Adamo, Marianna (56113383300) ;Lopatin, Yuri (59263990100) ;Chioncel, Ovidiu (12769077100) ;Coats, Andrew J.S. (35395386900)Seferović, Petar M. (55873742100)Cardiomyopathies are a significant contributor to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, mainly due to the development of heart failure and increased risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD). Despite improvement in survival with contemporary treatment, SCD remains an important cause of mortality in cardiomyopathies. It occurs at a rate ranging between 0.15% and 0.7% per year (depending on the cardiomyopathy), which significantly surpasses SCD incidence in the age- and sex-matched general population. The risk of SCD is affected by multiple factors including the aetiology, genetic basis, age, sex, physical exertion, the extent of myocardial disease severity, conduction system abnormalities, and electrical instability, as measured by various metrics. Over the past decades, the knowledge on the mechanisms and risk factors for SCD has substantially improved, allowing for a better-informed risk stratification. However, unresolved issues still challenge the guidance of SCD prevention in patients with cardiomyopathies. In this review, we aim to provide an in-depth discussion of the contemporary concepts pertinent to understanding the burden, risk assessment and prevention of SCD in cardiomyopathies (dilated, non-dilated left ventricular, hypertrophic, arrhythmogenic right ventricular, and restrictive). The review first focuses on SCD incidence in cardiomyopathies and then summarizes established and emerging risk factors for life-threatening arrhythmias/SCD. Finally, it discusses validated approaches to the risk assessment and evidence-based measures for SCD prevention in cardiomyopathies, pointing to the gaps in evidence and areas of uncertainties that merit future clarification. © 2023 European Society of Cardiology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Integration of imaging and circulating biomarkers in heart failure: a consensus document by the Biomarkers and Imaging Study Groups of the Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology(2021) ;Moura, Brenda (6602544591) ;Aimo, Alberto (56112889900) ;Al-Mohammad, Abdallah (57191218762) ;Flammer, Andreas (13007159300) ;Barberis, Vassilis (55890808700) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;Brunner-La Rocca, Hans-Peter (7003352089) ;Fontes-Carvalho, Ricardo (23097322300) ;Grapsa, Julia (57204441798) ;Hülsmann, Martin (7006719269) ;Ibrahim, Nasrien (56392489500) ;Knackstedt, Christian (6506839019) ;Januzzi, James L. (7003533511) ;Lapinskas, Tomas (57203632017) ;Sarrias, Axel (55624945200) ;Matskeplishvili, Simon (6602403114) ;Meijers, Wouter C. (56085653000) ;Messroghli, Daniel (6603344046) ;Mueller, Christian (57638261900) ;Pavo, Noemi (14065082800) ;Simonavičius, Justas (57188701168) ;Teske, Arco J. (22235274900) ;van Kimmenade, Roland (6508222707) ;Seferovic, Petar (6603594879) ;Coats, Andrew J.S. (35395386900) ;Emdin, Michele (7005694410)Richards, A. Mark (7402299599)Circulating biomarkers and imaging techniques provide independent and complementary information to guide management of heart failure (HF). This consensus document by the Heart Failure Association (HFA) of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) presents current evidence-based indications relevant to integration of imaging techniques and biomarkers in HF. The document first focuses on application of circulating biomarkers together with imaging findings, in the broad domains of screening, diagnosis, risk stratification, guidance of treatment and monitoring, and then discusses specific challenging settings. In each section we crystallize clinically relevant recommendations and identify directions for future research. The target readership of this document includes cardiologists, internal medicine specialists and other clinicians dealing with HF patients. © 2021 European Society of Cardiology - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Practical algorithms for early diagnosis of heart failure and heart stress using NT-proBNP: A clinical consensus statement from the Heart Failure Association of the ESC(2023) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;Docherty, Kieran F. (55444090300) ;Petrie, Mark C. (57222705876) ;Januzzi, James L. (7003533511) ;Mueller, Christian (57638261900) ;Anderson, Lisa (7403741602) ;Bozkurt, Biykem (7004172442) ;Butler, Javed (57203521637) ;Chioncel, Ovidiu (12769077100) ;Cleland, John G.F. (7202164137) ;Christodorescu, Ruxandra (8203870600) ;Del Prato, Stefano (57202034709) ;Gustafsson, Finn (7005115957) ;Lam, Carolyn S.P. (19934204100) ;Moura, Brenda (6602544591) ;Pop-Busui, Rodica (7801615735) ;Seferovic, Petar (55873742100) ;Volterrani, Maurizio (7004062259) ;Vaduganathan, Muthiah (16417973600) ;Metra, Marco (7006770735)Rosano, Giuseppe (7007131876)Diagnosing heart failure is often difficult due to the non-specific nature of symptoms, which can be caused by a range of medical conditions. Natriuretic peptides (NPs) have been recognized as important biomarkers for diagnosing heart failure. This document from the Heart Failure Association examines the practical uses of N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) in various clinical scenarios. The concentrations of NT-proBNP vary according to the patient profile and the clinical scenario, therefore values should be interpreted with caution to ensure appropriate diagnosis. Validated cut-points are provided to rule in or rule out acute heart failure in the emergency department and to diagnose de novo heart failure in the outpatient setting. We also coin the concept of ‘heart stress’ when NT-proBNP levels are elevated in an asymptomatic patient with risk factors for heart failure (i.e. diabetes, hypertension, coronary artery disease), underlying the development of cardiac dysfunction and further increased risk. We propose a simple acronym for healthcare professionals and patients, FIND-HF, which serves as a prompt to consider heart failure: Fatigue, Increased water accumulation, Natriuretic peptide testing, and Dyspnoea. Use of this acronym would enable the early diagnosis of heart failure. Overall, understanding and utilizing NT-proBNP levels will lead to earlier and more accurate diagnoses of heart failure ultimately improving patient outcomes and reducing healthcare costs. © 2023 European Society of Cardiology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Pre-discharge and early post-discharge management of patients hospitalized for acute heart failure: A scientific statement by the Heart Failure Association of the ESC(2023) ;Metra, Marco (7006770735) ;Adamo, Marianna (56113383300) ;Tomasoni, Daniela (57214231971) ;Mebazaa, Alexandre (57210091243) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;Abdelhamid, Magdy (57069808700) ;Adamopoulos, Stamatis (55399885400) ;Anker, Stefan D. (57783017100) ;Bauersachs, Johann (7004626054) ;Belenkov, Yuri (7006528098) ;Böhm, Michael (35392235500) ;Gal, Tuvia Ben (7003448638) ;Butler, Javed (57203521637) ;Cohen-Solal, Alain (57189610711) ;Filippatos, Gerasimos (57396841000) ;Gustafsson, Finn (7005115957) ;Hill, Loreena (56572076500) ;Jaarsma, Tiny (56962769200) ;Jankowska, Ewa A. (21640520500) ;Lainscak, Mitja (9739432000) ;Lopatin, Yuri (59263990100) ;Lund, Lars H. (7102206508) ;McDonagh, Theresa (7003332406) ;Milicic, Davor (56503365500) ;Moura, Brenda (6602544591) ;Mullens, Wilfried (55916359500) ;Piepoli, Massimo (7005292730) ;Polovina, Marija (35273422300) ;Ponikowski, Piotr (7005331011) ;Rakisheva, Amina (57196007935) ;Ristic, Arsen (7003835406) ;Savarese, Gianluigi (36189499900) ;Seferovic, Petar (6603594879) ;Sharma, Rajan (35303631800) ;Thum, Thomas (57195743477) ;Tocchetti, Carlo G. (6507913481) ;Van Linthout, Sophie (6602562561) ;Vitale, Cristiana (7005091702) ;Von Haehling, Stephan (6602981479) ;Volterrani, Maurizio (7004062259) ;Coats, Andrew J.S. (35395386900) ;Chioncel, Ovidiu (12769077100)Rosano, Giuseppe (7007131876)Acute heart failure is a major cause of urgent hospitalizations. These are followed by marked increases in death and rehospitalization rates, which then decline exponentially though they remain higher than in patients without a recent hospitalization. Therefore, optimal management of patients with acute heart failure before discharge and in the early post-discharge phase is critical. First, it may prevent rehospitalizations through the early detection and effective treatment of residual or recurrent congestion, the main manifestation of decompensation. Second, initiation at pre-discharge and titration to target doses in the early post-discharge period, of guideline-directed medical therapy may improve both short- and long-term outcomes. Third, in chronic heart failure, medical treatment is often left unchanged, so the acute heart failure hospitalization presents an opportunity for implementation of therapy. The aim of this scientific statement by the Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology is to summarize recent findings that have implications for clinical management both in the pre-discharge and the early post-discharge phase after a hospitalization for acute heart failure. © 2023 European Society of Cardiology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Prevention of sudden death in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction: do we still need an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator for primary prevention?(2022) ;Abdelhamid, Magdy (57069808700) ;Rosano, Giuseppe (7007131876) ;Metra, Marco (7006770735) ;Adamopoulos, Stamatis (55399885400) ;Böhm, Michael (35392235500) ;Chioncel, Ovidiu (12769077100) ;Filippatos, Gerasimos (57396841000) ;Jankowska, Ewa A. (21640520500) ;Lopatin, Yury (59263990100) ;Lund, Lars (7102206508) ;Milicic, Davor (56503365500) ;Moura, Brenda (6602544591) ;Ben Gal, Tuvia (7003448638) ;Ristic, Arsen (7003835406) ;Rakisheva, Amina (57196007935) ;Savarese, Gianluigi (36189499900) ;Mullens, Wilfried (55916359500) ;Piepoli, Massimo (7005292730) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;Thum, Thomas (57195743477) ;Anker, Stefan D. (56223993400) ;Seferovic, Petar (6603594879)Coats, Andrew J.S. (35395386900)Sudden death is a devastating complication of heart failure (HF). Current guidelines recommend an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) for prevention of sudden death in patients with HF and reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) specifically those with a left ventricular ejection fraction ≤35% after at least 3 months of optimized HF treatment. The benefit of ICD in patients with symptomatic HFrEF caused by coronary artery disease has been well documented; however, the evidence for a benefit of prophylactic ICD implantation in patients with HFrEF of non-ischaemic aetiology is less strong. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers, beta-blockers (BB), and mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists (MRA) block the deleterious actions of angiotensin II, norepinephrine, and aldosterone, respectively. Neprilysin inhibition potentiates the actions of endogenous natriuretic peptides that mitigate adverse ventricular remodelling. BB, MRA, angiotensin receptor–neprilysin inhibitor (ARNI) have a favourable effect on reduction of sudden cardiac death in HFrEF. Recent data suggest a beneficial effect of sodium–glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) in reducing serious ventricular arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death in patients with HFrEF. So, in the current era of new drugs for HFrEF and with the optimal use of disease-modifying therapies (BB, MRA, ARNI and SGLT2i), we might need to reconsider the need and timing for use of ICD as primary prevention of sudden death, especially in HF of non-ischaemic aetiology. © 2022 European Society of Cardiology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Self-care of heart failure patients: practical management recommendations from the Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology(2021) ;Jaarsma, Tiny (56962769200) ;Hill, Loreena (56572076500) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;La Rocca, Hans-Peter Brunner (55269453900) ;Castiello, Teresa (51664479600) ;Čelutkienė, Jelena (6507133552) ;Marques-Sule, Elena (55747837900) ;Plymen, Carla M. (14042238000) ;Piper, Susan E. (59682804000) ;Riegel, Barbara (7006252089) ;Rutten, Frans H. (7005091114) ;Ben Gal, Tuvia (7003448638) ;Bauersachs, Johann (7004626054) ;Coats, Andrew J.S. (35395386900) ;Chioncel, Ovidiu (12769077100) ;Lopatin, Yuri (6601956122) ;Lund, Lars H. (7102206508) ;Lainscak, Mitja (9739432000) ;Moura, Brenda (6602544591) ;Mullens, Wilfried (55916359500) ;Piepoli, Massimo F. (7005292730) ;Rosano, Giuseppe (7007131876) ;Seferovic, Petar (6603594879)Strömberg, Anna (7005873059)Self-care is essential in the long-term management of chronic heart failure. Heart failure guidelines stress the importance of patient education on treatment adherence, lifestyle changes, symptom monitoring and adequate response to possible deterioration. Self-care is related to medical and person-centred outcomes in patients with heart failure such as better quality of life as well as lower mortality and readmission rates. Although guidelines give general direction for self-care advice, health care professionals working with patients with heart failure need more specific recommendations. The aim of the management recommendations in this paper is to provide practical advice for health professionals delivering care to patients with heart failure. Recommendations for nutrition, physical activity, medication adherence, psychological status, sleep, leisure and travel, smoking, immunization and preventing infections, symptom monitoring, and symptom management are consistent with information from guidelines, expert consensus documents, recent evidence and expert opinion. © 2020 The Authors. European Journal of Heart Failure published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Cardiology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication The ‘peptide for life’ initiative in the emergency department study(2024) ;Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140) ;Krljanac, Gordana (8947929900) ;Zdravković, Marija (24924016800) ;Ašanin, Milika (8603366900) ;Stojšić-Milosavljević, Anastazija (6505915662) ;Radovanović, Slavica (24492602300) ;Kovačević, Tamara Preradović (57224640606) ;Selaković, Aleksandar (57210254312) ;Milinković, Ivan (51764040100) ;Polovina, Marija (35273422300) ;Glavaš, Duška (15762332500) ;Srbinovska, Elizabeta (39462191600) ;Bulatović, Nebojša (6504730350) ;Miličić, Davor (56503365500) ;Čikeš, Maja (55895105900) ;Babić, Zdravko (18533709700) ;Šikić, Jozica (25951661600) ;Kušljugić, Zumreta (6508231417) ;Hudić, Larisa Dizdarević (57214805299) ;Arfsten, Henrike (57192299905) ;Meems, Laura M.G. (56455188400) ;Metra, Marco (7006770735) ;Rosano, Giuseppe (7007131876) ;Seferović, Petar M. (55873742100) ;Tomic, M. (58629586600) ;Stankovic, S. (58723826500) ;Klaric, M. (59116890900) ;Viduljevic, M. (57266248400) ;Djordjevic, N. (57218341417) ;Klac, J. (58958008600) ;Civric, D. (58629166100) ;Pejovic, T. (57222532504) ;Babic, B. (57191586163) ;Nenezic, T. (38561841000) ;Radovanovic, Z. (59571227500) ;Jungic, B. (58958010700) ;Milovancev, A. (57217948632) ;Tripunovic, J. (57889301800) ;Denda, N. (58958008800) ;Milosavljevic, I. (57217204655) ;Jankovic, M. (58958014700) ;Dikovic, B. (58958008900) ;Zimbakov, Z. (56073440700) ;Mitevska, I. (56698414500) ;Kostovski, L. (58958006400) ;Popadic, V. (57223264452) ;Radojevic, A. (57944532000) ;Manojlovic, A. (57564177900) ;Radovanovic, D. (56461552500) ;Ivankovic, T. (57750815700) ;Gajic, U. (58958021600) ;Stojanovic, M. (57188923072) ;Marinkovic, D. (57783790900) ;Stojkovic, J. (57200810273) ;Stojcic, B. (54391704400) ;Savic, V. (57204896417) ;Bogdanovic, M. (57226122308) ;Sredojevic, M. (58222325300) ;Blagojevic, N. (57219697551) ;Radovanovic, M. (59860744500) ;Tabakovic, L. (58958016800) ;Borovac, J.A. (55928754900) ;Meter, M. (57243971800) ;Parcina, M. (58121927800) ;Sosic, A. (58958006700) ;Ivanisevic Dzaja, M. (58958011000) ;Katic, J. (57235569300) ;Pasara, V. (56871172100) ;Hoteit, S. (57226378559)Planinic, Z. (57214683072)Aims: Natriuretic peptide (NP) uptake varies in Emergency Departments (EDs) across Europe. The ‘Peptide for Life’ (P4L) initiative, led by Heart Failure Association, aims to enhance NP utilization for early diagnosis of heart failure (HF). We tested the hypothesis that implementing an educational campaign in Western Balkan countries would significantly increase NP adoption rates in the ED. Methods and results: This registry examined NP adoption before and after implementing the P4L-ED study across 10 centres in five countries: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Serbia. A train-the-trainer programme was implemented to enhance awareness of NP testing in the ED, and centres without access received point-of-care instruments. Differences in NP testing between the pre-P4L-ED and post-P4L-ED phases were evaluated. A total of 2519 patients were enrolled in the study: 1224 (48.6%) in the pre-P4L-ED phase and 1295 (51.4%) in the post-P4L-ED phase. NP testing was performed in the ED on 684 patients (55.9%) during the pre-P4L-ED phase and on 1039 patients (80.3%) during the post-P4L-ED phase, indicating a significant absolute difference of 24.4% (95% CI: 20.8% to 27.9%, P < 0.001). The use of both NPs and echocardiography significantly increased from 37.7% in the pre-P4L-ED phase to 61.3% in the post-P4L-ED phase. There was an increased prescription of diuretics and SGLT2 inhibitors during the post-P4L-ED phase. Conclusions: By increasing awareness and providing resources, the utilization of NPs increased in the ED, leading to improved diagnostic accuracy and enhanced patient care. © 2023 The Authors. ESC Heart Failure published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Cardiology.