Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

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Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003

Transcript of Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Page 1: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Heart Failure Pharmacology

Christine Grenier, Pharm.D.

December 12, 2003

Page 2: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Objectives

• To review the medications used in heart failure.

• To summarize the 2001 ACC/AHA guidelines for the management of heart failure.

• To understand which medications are appropriate for and contraindicated in specific heart failure patient populations.

Page 3: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Statistics

• Heart failure affects nearly 5 million people in the U.S.

• Annually, about 500,000 people are diagnosed with heart failure in the U.S.

• Around 300,000 patients die each year of heart failure as a primary or secondary cause.

• Approximately 6-10% of people older than 65 years have heart failure.

Page 4: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Types of Heart Failure

Systolic dysfunction

- Decreased contractility

- Decrease in muscle mass, dilated

cardiomyopathies, or ventricular

hypertrophy

Diastolic dysfunction

- Increased ventricular stiffness, valve

stenosis, or pericardial disease

Page 5: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

ACC/AHA Guidelines - Treatment of Symptomatic LVD

• ACE-inhibition in all patients

• Beta-blockade in all stable patients

• Diuretics for fluid retention

• Digitalis for symptomatic HF

• Moderate sodium restriction

• Influenza and pneumococcal vaccines

• Moderate exercise

J Heart Lung Transplant, 2002

Page 6: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

ACC/AHA Guidelines - Treatment of Asymptomatic Left Ventricular Dysfunction (LVD)

• Treatment of risk factors

– HTN

– Dyslipidemia

• ACE inhibition

• Beta-blockade

J Heart Lung Transplant, 2002

Page 7: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Heart Failure Pharmacology

ACE-inhibitors/ARB’s

Beta-blockers

Diuretics

Aldosterone antagonists

Digoxin

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ACE-Inhibitors

• Recommended in all stages of HF, benefit has been shown in all classes

• Inhibit activation of renin-angiotensin system decreases Na+ retention

• Higher doses were used in the clinical trials, but patients on multiple HF medications may become hypotensive on high dose ACE-inhibitors

Page 9: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

ACE-InhibitorsWhich ACE-inhibitors should be used?

Lisinopril Enalapril

***Captopril is more appropriate as an inpatient medication due to its shorter half-life

When should ACE-inhibitors be avoided?- Angioedema/rash/hives, cough

- Bilateral renal artery stenosis- SCr > 3.0- Serum K+ > 5.5

Page 10: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

ACE-Inhibitors

Monitoring Parameters:

Potassium levels (watch for hyperkalemia)

Renal function

Blood pressure

Adverse effects cough,

angioedema

Drug interactions

- NSAID’s (aspirin) effectiveness of ACE- inhibitors and increase risk of renal toxicity

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Angiotensin Receptor Blockers (ARB’s)

CHARM-Preserved Trial

• Candesartan (target dose of 32mg) vs. placebo in class II-IV HF patients

• No significant difference in cardiovascular death, but significant decrease in hospital admissions with candesartan

Lancet, 2003

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ARB’s

ELITE II Study

• Losartan 50mg/d vs. captopril 50mg TID in class II-IV HF patients

• No significant difference in all-cause mortality or sudden death

• Fewer # of patients in losartan group D/C’d treatment due to adverse effects

Lancet, 2000

Page 13: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

ARB’s

Monitoring Parameters:

Potassium levels

Renal function

Blood pressure

Adverse effects cough,

angioedema

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ACE-Inhibitor or ARB

ACE-inhibitor or ARB…….or BOTH?????

– ACE-inhibitor use is recommended in all classes of HF and is still considered first line therapy.

– If a patient cannot tolerate an ACE-inhibitor due to cough, then switch to an ARB.

– Will an ACE-inhibitor/ARB combo provide more complete blockade of renin-angiotensin system?

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VALIANT Trial

• Valsartan 20 mg vs. captopril 6.25 mg + valsartan 20 mg vs. captopril 6.25 mg in post-acute MI patients

• Target doses = valsartan 80 mg BID, captopril 25 mg TID + valsartan 40 mg BID, and captopril 25 mg TID

Page 16: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

VALIANT Trial

• No significant differences seen in mortality, but the combination of valsartan and captopril was associated with an increase in adverse events.

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ACE-Inhibitor or ARB

What about angioedema with an ACE-inhibitor? Should the patient receive an ARB?

DO NOT switch to an ARB following angioedema with an ACE-inhibitor because there is a degree cross-reactivity. Angioedema is a serious and life threatening allergic reaction!

Instead, switch patient to hydralazine and a nitrate (VHEFT and VHEFT II).

Page 18: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

ACE-Inhibitor/ARB

• What dose do I initiate?

Lisinopril: 2.5-5 mg/d, then may increase by up to 10 mg every 2 weeks to max of 40 mg/d

Enalapril: 2.5-5mg/d, then may increase by up to 10 mg every 2 weeks to max of 40 mg/d

Losartan: 12.5 mg/day, then may titrate to 25mg/d at 7-day intervals, target dose of 50 mg/d

Page 19: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Application

Strength Qty PriceValsartan (Diovan®) 40mg #60 $83.98

Losartan (Cozaar®) 25mg #22 $35.93

Enalapril 5 mg #45 $25.49

Lisinopril 2.5 mg #45 $20.99

Prices obtained from www.walgreens.com

Page 20: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Beta-blockers

MERIT-HF Trial

- Metoprolol CR/XL vs. placebo, target dose of 200 mg/day

- Symptomatic but clinically stable patients categorized as NYHA II-IV

- Metoprolol added onto ACE-inhibitors and diuretics

JAMA, 2000

Page 21: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

MERIT-HFResults:• Significant decrease in mortality with

metoprolol of 38% • Significant decrease in sudden death of

41% • Significant decrease in death from

worsening HF of 49% • Number of patients needed to treat in one

year to save one life is 27

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COMET Trial

• Carvedilol (25 mg BID) vs. immediate release metoprolol (50 mg BID)

• NYHA II-IV HF patients

• Carvedilol or metoprolol added onto ACE-inhibitors and diuretics

Lancet, 2003

Page 23: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

COMET TrialResults:

• Significant decrease of 17% in all-cause mortality with carvedilol (HR=0.83)

• Absolute reduction in mortality over 5 years of 5.7% with carvedilol

• No significant differences in composite endpoint of all-cause mortality and all-cause admissions

Page 24: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

COMET Trial

• Number of patient-years of treatment needed to save one life was 59

• Median prolongation of survival of 1.4 years with carvedilol

Page 25: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Carvedilol

Suggested benefits of carvedilol over metoprolol:

• β1 and β2 receptor blockade

• Inhibition of alpha-receptors

• Increased anti-ischemic effect

• Antioxidant effect (inhibition of apoptosis and free radical scavenging)

• Enhanced insulin sensitivity

Page 26: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Clinical Applications

• When do I start a beta-blocker?

When the patient displays mild limitation of physical activity (NYHA II).

Start low and titrate slowly in severe HF.

• Can I use beta-blockers in asthmatic and COPD patients?

Don’t withhold beta-blockers, start with low doses and titrate up slowly.

Page 27: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Clinical Application

• What dose do I initiate?

Carvedilol: 3.125 mg BID x 2 wks, may double dose every 2 weeks, target dose = 50 - 100 mg/d

Metoprolol: 25mg qd x 2 wks, may double dose every 2 weeks, target dose = 200 mg/d

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Clinical Application

• How should a beta-blocker be removed from a patient’s therapeutic regimen?

The dose should be slowly titrated down over weeks to months before discontinuation.

Page 29: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Clinical Application

Strength Qty Price

Carvedilol (Coreg®) 3.125 mg #84 $155.40

Toprol XL (metoprolol) 25 mg #42 $30.80

Metoprolol 50 mg #21 $3.85

Prices obtained from www.walgreens.com

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Clinical Applications

Monitoring Parameters:

Blood pressure

Heart rate

Nocturnal dyspnea

Exercise tolerance

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HF and Fluid Retention

Cardiac output

Renal blood flow

Activation of renin-angiotensin system

Sodium retention

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Diuretics

• Decrease pulmonary edema and cardiac filling pressures

• Loop

Thiazide

Potassium - sparing

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Diuretics Loop Thiazide K+ - Sparing

Bumetanide HCTZ Spironolactone

(Bumex®) Indapamide Triamterene

Ethacrynic acid Metolazone Amiloride

Furosemide Chlorthalidone

Torsemide

(Demedex®)

Carbonic Anhydrase Inhib.

Acetazolamide

Page 34: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.
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Diuretics

Which patients should get diuretics?

Patients with evidence of fluid retention

****BUT, renal insufficiency can cause decreased response to diuretics or even diuretic resistance.

Page 36: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Diuretics

Which diuretics should be used?

In patients with known HF, a loop diuretic is recommended.

Page 37: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Diuretic Issues

• Diuretic resistance• Combination diuretics• Bioavailability issues

Page 38: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Diuretics

Monitoring parameters:

Potassium levels

Renal function

Blood pressure

Weight

Page 39: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Aldosterone Antagonists

Spironolactone

Eplerenone (Inspra®)

• For use in patients with more severe HF (NYHA class III-IV)

• Can decrease Na+ retention, myocardial fibrosis, baroreceptor dysfunction, and ventricular ectopy

Page 40: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Aldosterone Antagonists

RALES Trial

- At doses of 25 to 50 mg/day in patients with class III or IV HF, spironolactone reduced all cause mortality by 11% and hospitalizations by 35%

(Note: effective doses are small!!)

NEJM, 1999

Page 41: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Aldosterone Antagonists

Eplerenone (Inspra®):

- A selective aldosterone blocker blocks mineralocorticoid receptor instead of glucocorticoid, progesterone or androgen receptors

- Decreased incidence of gynecomastia

Page 42: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Aldosterone Antagonists

EPHESUS Trial

• Eplerenone 25 to 50 mg/day in patients with class III-IV HF

• Added on to ACE-inhibitors/ARB’s, beta-blockers, aspirin, and lipid lowering agents

Cardiovasc Drugs Ther, 2001

Page 43: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Aldosterone Antagonists

EPHESUS Trial

Significant reduction in the risk of:

• Death from any cause by 8% • Sudden death from cardiac causes by

21%• Hospitalization by 15%

Page 44: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Aldosterone Antagonists

• What dose do I initiate?

Spironolactone: 25 mg/day, may increase or decrease based upon response

Eplerenone: 25 mg/d then may increase to 50 mg/d in 4 weeks

Page 45: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Aldosterone AntagonistsMonitoring Parameters:

Potassium levels (watch for hyperkalemia)

Renal function caution with

Clcr<50 ml/min

Blood pressure

Drug interactions - hepatically

metabolized CYP3A4

(amiodarone, diltiazem, erythromycin, carbamazepine, phenytoin)

Page 46: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Clinical Application

• Spironolactone should be initiated first unless the patient experiences significant side effects, then switch to eplerenone.

Strength Qty PriceEplerenone 25 mg #30 $112.50

Spironolactone 25mg #30 $9.00

Prices obtained from www.walgreens.com

Page 47: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Digoxin

• Positive inotropic action inhibits Na+/K+ ATPase which increases intracellular calcium

• Inhibits sympathetic response and increases both parasympathetic response and baroreceptor sensitivity

Page 48: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Digoxin

• Recommended in HF with concomitant atrial fibrillation

• Recommended in classes II-III rather than in classes I and IV

• Controversial in patients with HF and normal sinus rhythm

• NOT to be used as monotherapy in HF

Page 49: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Digoxin

RADIANCE Study

• Digoxin in class II-III HF patients with normal sinus rhythm

• Placebo patients had a relative risk of 5.9 of developing worsening HF of when compared to digoxin patients

NEJM, 1993

Page 50: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

DIG Trial

• Digoxin added to ACE-inhibitors and diuretics vs. placebo in classes I-IV HF patients with normal sinus rhythm

• No significant difference in all-cause mortality from any cause, but 7.9% decrease in hospitalizations with digoxin.

Page 51: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

DIG Trial

• Significant increase in mortality with higher doses of digoxin and small but significant increase in other cardiac deaths with digoxin (15% vs 13%, P=0.04).

J Am Coll Cardiol, 2001

Page 52: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Digoxin• Target serum concentration = 0.5 - 1 ng/ml in

patients with HF and normal sinus rhythm. Obtain levels 5-7 days following dosage change.

• Monitoring Parameters:

Renal function

Heart rate and rhythm

Electrolyte levels (K+, Mg+, and Ca2+)

Side effects and signs of toxicity

Page 53: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Drugs to Avoid

NONSTEROIDAL ANTI-INFLAMMATORIES

- Na+ retention and peripheral vasoconstriction

CALCIUM CHANNEL BLOCKERS

- Worsen heart failure due to negative chronotropic and inotropic effects

- Diltiazem and verapamil are NOT considered appropriate in HF

Page 54: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Drugs to Avoid

ANTIARRHYTHMICS

- Cardiodepressant and proarrhythmic effects

Exception: amiodarone

Page 55: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Summary

• All HF patients should be on an ACE-inhibitor, or if unable to tolerate an ACE-I, an ARB.

• Clinically stable HF patients class II-IV can benefit from a beta-blocker.

• All patients with symptomatic LVD or systolic dysfunction should be on a diuretic.

Page 56: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Summary

• Aldosterone antagonists provide the most benefit in more severe HF (class III-IV).

• Digoxin is not recommended for monotherapy in HF, and has neutral effects on mortality, but has been shown to decrease hospitalizations.

Page 57: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

Questions??

Page 58: Heart Failure Pharmacology Christine Grenier, Pharm.D. December 12, 2003.

References1. Hunt SA, Baker DW, Chin MH, et al. ACC/AHA guidelines for the evaluation and management of chronic

heart failure in the adult: executive summary. J Heart Lung Transplant 2002; 21(2): 189-203.

2. Hjalmarson A, Goldstein S, Fagerberg B, et al. Effects of controlled-release metoprolol on total mortality, hospitalizations, and well-being in patients with heart failure: the Metoprolol CR/XL Randomized Intervention Trial in congestive heart failure (MERIT-HF). MERIT-HF Study Group. JAMA 2000; 283(10):1295-302.

3. Poole-Wilson PA, Swedberg K, Cleland JG, et al. Comparison of carvedilol and metoprolol on clinical outcomes in patients with chronic heart failure in the Carvedilol Or Metoprolol European Trial (COMET): randomised controlled trial. Lancet 2003; 362(9377): 7-13.

4. Yusef S, Pfeffer MA, Swedberg K, et al. Effects of candesartan in patients with chronic heart failure and preserved left-ventricular ejection fraction: the CHARM-Preserved Trial. Lancet 2003; 362(9386): 777-81.

5. Pitt B, Poole-Wilson PA, Segal R, et al. Effect of losartan compared with captopril on mortality in patients with symptomatic heart failure: randomised trial –the Losartan Heart Failure Survival Study ELITE II. Lancet 2000; 355(9215): 1582-7.

6. Pitt, B et al. The Effect of Spironolactone on Morbidity and Mortality in Patients with Severe Heart Failure: the RALES Trial. NEJM 1999; 341(10): 709-17.

7. Pitt B, Williams G, Remme W, et al. The EPHESUS trial: eplerenone in patients with heart failure due to systolic dysfunction complicating acute myocardial infarction. Eplerenone Post-AMI Heart Failure Efficacy and Survival Study. Cardiovasc Drugs Ther 2001; 15(1): 79-87.

8. Packer M, Gheorghiade M, Young JB, et al. Withdrawal of digoxin from patients with chronic heart failure treated with angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitors. RADIANCE Study. NEJM 1993; 329(1): 1-7.

9. Rich MW, McSherry F, Williford WO, et al. Effect of age on mortality, hospitalizations and response to digoxin in patients with heart failure: the DIG Study. J Am Coll Cardiol 2001; 38(3): 806-13.