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Eligibility of sacubitril–valsartan in a real‐world heart failure population: a community‐based single‐centre study
Author(s) -
Norberg Helena,
Bergdahl Ellinor,
Lindmark Krister
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
esc heart failure
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.787
H-Index - 25
ISSN - 2055-5822
DOI - 10.1002/ehf2.12251
Subject(s) - heart failure , ejection fraction , medicine , sacubitril, valsartan , cardiology , population , valsartan , atrial fibrillation , sacubitril , blood pressure , environmental health
Aims This study aims to investigate the eligibility of the Prospective Comparison of Angiotensin Receptor–Neprilysin Inhibitor (ARNI) with ACE inhibitor to Determine Impact on Global Mortality and Morbidity in Heart Failure (PARADIGM‐HF) study to a real‐world heart failure population. Methods and results Medical records of all heart failure patients living within the catchment area of Umeå University Hospital were reviewed. This district consists of around 150 000 people. Out of 2029 patients with a diagnosis of heart failure, 1924 (95%) had at least one echocardiography performed, and 401 patients had an ejection fraction of ≤35% at their latest examination. The major PARADIGM‐HF criteria were applied, and 95 patients fulfilled all enrolment criteria and thus were eligible for sacubitril–valsartan. This corresponds to 5% of the overall heart failure population and 24% of the population with ejection fraction ≤ 35%. The eligible patients were significantly older (73.2 ± 10.3 vs. 63.8 ± 11.5 years), had higher blood pressure (128 ± 17 vs. 122 ± 15 mmHg), had higher heart rate (77 ± 17 vs. 72 ± 12 b.p.m.), and had more atrial fibrillation (51.6% vs. 36.2%) than did the PARADIGM‐HF population. Conclusions Only 24% of our real‐world heart failure and reduced ejection fraction population was eligible for sacubitril–valsartan, and the real‐world heart failure and reduced ejection fraction patients were significantly older than the PARADIGM‐HF population. The lack of data on a majority of the patients that we see in clinical practice is a real problem, and we are limited to extrapolation of results on a slightly different population. This is difficult to address, but perhaps registry‐based randomized clinical trials will help to solve this issue.

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