Acute Heart Failure: Transitioning From Symptom-Based Care to Remission

G. A.D. COTTER, BETH A. DAVISON, DOUGLAS L. MANN, J. A.N. BIEGUS, JOZINE M. TERMAATEN, MATTEO PAGNESI, YONATHAN FREUND, ADRIAAN A. VOORS, PIOTR PONIKOWSKI, MARCO METRA, ALEXANDRE MEBAZAA

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

During the past century, the characteristics of patients with heart failure (HF) and acute HF (AHF) have shifted from patients with severe pump failure due to rheumatic, hypertensive and ischemic heart disease to older and more obese patients with multiple severe comorbidities. The pathophysiology of AHF has shifted, in parallel, from that of advanced, end-stage pump failure caused by severe left ventricular dysfunction to age, obesity and comorbidity-related cardiovascular dysfunction combined with neurohormonal and inflammatory dysregulation or “inflammaging.” With the advent of neurohormonal blockers leading to improved outcomes of patients with chronic HF, the focus of AHF therapy has also changed from care directed at early symptom improvement to therapies directed toward longer-term improvements in quality of life and outcomes. Studies conducted in the past 5 years suggest that the beneficial effects seen with the 4 pillars of guideline-directed medical therapy for HF, mostly comprising neurohormonal blockade, can be extended to AHF when these therapies are initiated and rapidly uptitrated during admission and after discharge. A recent pilot study, CORTAHF (Effect of Short-Term Prednisone Therapy on CRP Change in Emergency Department Patients With Acute Heart Failure and Elevated Inflammatory Markers), has suggested that these benefits can be extended by treating patients with AHF and markers of inflammatory activation with anti-inflammatory therapies. Future studies should further examine whether combined anti-inflammatory therapy and neurohormonal blockade can lead to the reversal of disrupted underlying pathophysiology and remission in patients with AHF.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of cardiac failure
DOIs
StateAccepted/In press - 2025

Keywords

  • Acute heart failure
  • anti-inflammatory therapy
  • neurohormonal blockade

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