Baroreflex activation therapy in patients with heart failure and a reduced ejection fraction: Long‐term outcomes

Author:

Zile Michael R.1,Lindenfeld JoAnn2,Weaver Fred A.3,Zannad Faiez4,Galle Elizabeth5,Rogers Tyson6,Abraham William T.7

Affiliation:

1. Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina and the Ralph H. Johnson Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center Charleston SC USA

2. Vanderbilt Heart and Vascular Institute Nashville TN USA

3. Division of Vascular Surgery and Endovascular Therapy, Keck School of Medicine University of Southern California Los Angeles CA USA

4. Université de Lorraine, Inserm Centre d'Investigation, CHU de Nancy, Institute Lorrain du Coeur et des Vaisseaux Nancy France

5. CVRx, Inc. Minneapolis MN USA

6. NAMSA, Inc. Minneapolis MN USA

7. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine The Ohio State University Columbus OH USA

Abstract

AimsCarotid baroreflex activation therapy (BAT) restores baroreflex sensitivity and modulates the imbalance in cardiac autonomic function in patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF). We tested the hypothesis that treatment with BAT significantly reduces cardiovascular mortality and heart failure morbidity and provides long‐term safety and sustainable symptomatic improvement.Methods and resultsBeAT‐HF was a prospective, multicentre, randomized, two‐arm, parallel‐group, open‐label, non‐implanted control trial. New York Heart Association (NYHA) class III subjects, ejection fraction ≤35%, previous heart failure hospitalization or N‐terminal pro‐B‐type natriuretic peptide (NT‐proBNP) >400 pg/ml, no class I indication for cardiac resynchronization therapy and NT‐proBNP <1600 pg/ml were randomized to BAT plus optimal medical management (BAT group) or optimal medical management alone (control). The primary endpoint was cardiovascular mortality and HF morbidity; additional pre‐specified endpoints included durability of safety, quality of life (QOL), exercise capacity (6‐min hall walk distance [6MHWD]), functional status (NYHA class), hierarchical composite win ratio, freedom from all‐cause death, left ventricular assists device (LVAD) implantation, heart transplant. Overall, 323 patients had 332 primary events, median follow‐up was 3.6 years/patient. Both primary endpoint (rate ratio 0.94, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.57–1.57; p = 0.82) and components of the primary endpoints were not significantly different between BAT and control. The system‐ and procedure‐related major adverse neurological and cardiovascular event‐free rate remained 97% throughout the trial. Symptom improvement (QOL, 6MHWD, NYHA class, all nominal p < 0.001) in the BAT group was durable in time, sustainable in extent. Win ratio (1.26, 95% CI 1.02–1.58) and freedom from all‐cause death, LVAD implantation, heart transplant (hazard ratio 0.66, 95% CI 0.43–1.01) favoured the BAT group but did not reach statistical significance.ConclusionThe BeAT‐HF primary endpoint was neutral; however, BAT provided safe, effective, and sustainable improvements in HFrEF patient's functional status, 6MHWD and QOL.

Publisher

Wiley

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