Abstract 14826: Effect of Torsemide vs Furosemide After Discharge for Acute Heart Failure Across the Spectrum of Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction: Observations From Transform-HF
Kapelios, CJ; Greene, SJ; Mentz, RJ; Ikeaba, U; Wojdyla, D; Anstrom, KJ; Eisenstein, EL; Pitt, B; Velazquez, EJ; Fang, JC
Published in: Circulation
TRANSFORM-HF trial showed no significant difference in mortality or hospitalization outcomes in patients randomized to torsemide (T) versus furosemide (F) following a heart failure (HF) hospitalization (HFH). However, outcomes and responses to some therapies differ across ejection fraction (EF) subgroups.
We compared baseline patient characteristics and described treatment effects for various endpoints in TRANSFORM-HF stratified by EF: HF with reduced (EF≤40%;HFrEF) vs mildly reduced (41-49%;HFmrEF) vs preserved (≥50%;HFpEF) EFs. We also evaluated the prognostic association between EF and outcomes. Study endpoints were all-cause mortality and hospitalization at 30 days and 12 months (separately and as composites), and total hospitalizations.
Our analysis included 2635 patients with EF data. Participants with HFpEF were older (72 [62-79] years) with lower eGFR (52 [36-72] ml/min/1.73m
) compared to the other EF cohorts, while patients with HFrEF had lower systolic blood pressure (112 [101-125] mmHg) and higher NT-proBNP levels (4554 [2368-9620] pg/ml). The neutral treatment effect for all studied endpoints did not differ across EF groups (all interaction p-values>0.05, Figure 1A). There was no significant difference in the rates of mortality and/or hospitalization at 12 months between patients in the three EF groups (HFrEF 59.2, HFmrEF 61, HFpEF 63 events/100 patient-years, p=0.24, Figure 1B). Even after adjusting for covariates the relative risk or rate ratio for all endpoints did not differ across EF groups.
Despite baseline differences between EF cohorts in TRANSFORM-HF, there were no significant differences in the study endpoints with T versus F across the EF spectrum. In contrast to previous observations, the adjusted risk ratios for all study endpoints did not differ by baseline EF. Following a HFH, there is substantial risk for all-cause mortality and subsequent hospitalization independent of EF.