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Sequencing of medical therapy in heart failure with a reduced ejection fraction
  1. Henry Oluwasefunmi Savage1,2,
  2. Anthony David Dimarco1,
  3. Brian Li1,2,
  4. Samantha Langley1,
  5. Amy Hardy-Wallace1,
  6. Rossella Barbagallo1,
  7. Jason N Dungu1,2
  1. 1 Cardiology, Essex Cardiothoracic Centre, Basildon, UK
  2. 2 Department of Circulatory Health, Anglia Ruskin University Faculty of Health Education Medicine & Social Care, Chelmsford, UK
  1. Correspondence to Dr Henry Oluwasefunmi Savage, Cardiology, Essex Cardiothoracic Centre, Basildon, SS16 5NL, UK; Henry.Savage{at}nhs.net

Abstract

The management of heart failure with a reduced ejection fraction is a true success story of modern medicine. Evidence from randomised clinical trials provides the basis for an extensive catalogue of disease-modifying drug treatments that improve both symptoms and survival. These treatments have undergone rigorous scrutiny by licensing and guideline development bodies to make them eligible for clinical use. With an increasing number of drug therapies however, it has become a complex management challenge to ensure patients receive these treatments in a timely fashion and at recommended doses. The tragedy is that, for a condition with many life-prolonging drug therapies, there remains a potentially avoidable mortality risk associated with delayed treatment. Heart failure therapeutic agents have conventionally been administered to patients in the chronological order they were tested in clinical trials, in line with the aggregate benefit observed when added to existing background treatment. We review the evidence for simultaneous expedited initiation of these disease-modifying drug therapies and how these strategies may focus the heart failure clinician on a time-defined smart goal of drug titration, while catering for patient individuality. We highlight the need for adequate staffing levels, especially heart failure nurse specialists and pharmacists, in a structure to provide the capacity to deliver this care. Finally, we propose a heart failure clinic titration schedule and novel practical treatment score which, if applied at each heart failure patient contact, could tackle treatment inertia by a constant assessment of attainment of optimal medical therapy.

  • Heart Failure, Systolic
  • Medication Adherence

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Footnotes

  • Twitter @savodoc, @jasondungu

  • Contributors All authors contributed to drafting and editing of the attached manuscript, along with final approval of the work.

  • Funding The authors have not declared a specific grant for this research from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

  • Competing interests None declared.

  • Provenance and peer review Commissioned; externally peer reviewed.