Effects of spironolactone on exercise blood pressure in patients at increased risk of developing heart failure: report from the HOMAGE trial
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Published:2024-09-06
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ISSN:0916-9636
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Container-title:Hypertension Research
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Hypertens Res
Author:
Wei Fang-FeiORCID, Pellicori PierpaoloORCID, Ferreira João PedroORCID, González ArantxaORCID, Mariottoni Beatrice, An De-WeiORCID, Verdonschot Job A. J.ORCID, Liu ChenORCID, Ahmed Fozia Z.ORCID, Petutschnigg JohannesORCID, Rossignol PatrickORCID, Heymans StephaneORCID, Cuthbert Joe, Girerd NicolasORCID, Clark Andrew L.ORCID, Li YanORCID, Nawrot Tim S.ORCID, Díez JavierORCID, Zannad FaiezORCID, Cleland John G. F.ORCID, Staessen Jan A.ORCID, , Asayama Kei, Bozec Erwan, Brunner La Rocca Hans P., Cosmi Franco, Cleland John G. F., Collier Tim, Díez Javier, Edelmann Frank, Ferreira João P., Girerd Nicolas, Grojean Stephanie, Hazebroek Mark, Heymans Stephane, Hansen Tine W., Khan Javed, López Begoñia, Latini Roberto, Mariottoni Beatrice, McDonald Ken, Maestre Gladys E., Moreno María U., Mamas Mamas A., Pizard Anne, Pieske Burkert, Petutschnigg Johannes, Pellicori Pierpaolo, Rossignol Patrick, Rouet Philippe, Ravassa Suzanna, Staessen Jan A., Thijs Lutgarde, Verdonschot Job A. J., Wei Fang-Fei, Zannad Faiez
Abstract
AbstractNone of the spironolactone trials in heart failure (HF) assessed the blood pressure (BP) responses to exercise, while conflicting results were reported for exercise capacity. In the HOMAGE trial, 527 patients at increased HF risk were randomized to usual treatment with or without spironolactone (25–50 mg/day). The current substudy included 113 controls and 114 patients assigned spironolactone, who all completed the incremental shuttle walk test at baseline and months 1 and 9. Quality of life (QoL) was assessed by EQ5D questionnaire. Between-group differences (spironolactone minus control [Δs]) were analyzed by repeated measures ANOVA with adjustment for baseline and, if appropriate, additionally for sex, age and body mass index. Δs in the pre-exercise systolic/diastolic BP were −8.00 mm Hg (95% CI, −11.6 to −4.43)/−0.85 mm Hg (−2.96 to 1.26) at month 1 and −9.58 mm Hg (−14.0 to −5.19)/−3.84 mm Hg (−6.22 to −1.47) at month 9. Δs in the post-exercise systolic/diastolic BP were −8.08 mm Hg (−14.2 to −2.01)/−2.07 mm Hg (−5.79 to 1.65) and −13.3 mm Hg (−19.9 to −6.75)/−4.62 mm Hg (−8.07 to −1.17), respectively. For completed shuttles, Δs at months 1 and 9 were 2.15 (−0.10 to 4.40) and 2.49 (−0.79 to 5.67), respectively. Δs in QoL were not significant. The correlations between the exercise-induced BP increases and the number of completed shuttles were similar in both groups. In conclusion, in patients at increased risk of developing HF, spironolactone reduced the pre- and post-exercise BP, but did not improve exercise capacity or QoL.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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