Heart Failure Society of America 2019: Virtual Visits, Spironolactone Issues, and Reasons to Worry – DocWire News

Posted: Published on September 18th, 2019

This post was added by Alex Diaz-Granados

The 2019 Heart Failure Society of America Scientific Meeting (HFSA 2019) in Philadelphia has wrapped up. DocWire News was there, and reports here on some interesting research from the meeting.

While the results were not statistically significant, the ViV-HF study was an interesting attempt to quantify the real-world impact of virtual visits (compared to in-person clinical visits) on appointment no-show rates in a population of heart failure patients who were transitioning from hospital to home.

Spironolactone, a commonly used therapy in heart failure patients, carries with is some issues. Two of these were explored in different studies. One study looked at the use of spironolactone in older patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) and a link between increased adverse events. The other study focused on a subset of patients with HFpEF and chronic kidney disease with resistant hypertension, who were assigned a companion therapy to help increase adherence to spironolactone.

A new analysis finds that the total overall heart failure burden among black adults in the United States is increasing. It also reports that persistent disparities in the burdens between white adults and black adults persists. The analysis included data on more than 20,000 participants from the National Health and Nutritional Survey (NHANES). While the increased odds of HF was attenuated after adjusting for risk factors andsocioeconomic status, disparities persisted and have widened over time, the researchers noted.

In patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus, the inhibition of SGLT-2 was not associated with improvements in left ventricular (LV) reverse remodeling, an abstract from the meeting reported. Although SGLT-2 inhibitors have shown in the metabolic model to improve heart failure in diabetic patients, they did not show a potential role in the improvement of LV reverse remodeling, the authors concluded.

Eric Raible is editor of the Cardiology section of DocWire News and has more than a decades worth of experience in covering and publishing in the cardiology space. Eric has previously served as a founding editor of CardioSource WorldNews, and is a former staff writer and editor of Cardiology Today.

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Heart Failure Society of America 2019: Virtual Visits, Spironolactone Issues, and Reasons to Worry - DocWire News

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