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Title: Heart failure with preserved ejection fractio


1
Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection
Fraction(HfpEF)ANWER GHANIFIBMSIRAQ
2
.
  • Heart failure (HF) is divided into three forms
    based on left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction
    (LVEF)
  • heart failure with preserved ejection fraction
    (HFpEF, LVEF 50),
  • heart failure with reduced ejection fraction
    (HFrEF, LVEF lt 40), and
  • heart failure with mid-range ejection fraction
    (HFmEF, LVEF 40 and lt 50).

3
.
  • Fifty per cent (50) of HF patients are in the
    subset of heart failure with preserved ejection
    fraction (HFpEF) whose 3 year mortality prognosis
    approximates to 50.

4
.
  • HFpEF has a global prevalence of 2

5
.
  • Compared with the rapid development in the
    treatment of heart failure with reduced ejection
    fraction, HFpEF presents a great challenge and
    needs to be addressed considering the failure of
    HF drugs to improve its outcomes.

6
Clinical Features
  • Patients suffering from HFpEF are older, mostly
    female and obese, and exhibit a lower prevalence
    of coronary artery disease (CAD) than patients
    with HFrEF.

7
Clinical Features
  • Patients with AF and underlying HFpEF have
    reduced exercise tolerance and worsened
    ventricular function than those with AF alone.

8
Clinical Features
  • HFpEF is a systemic syndrome involving multiple
    organs. Diastolic factors affecting HFpEF are the
    pulmonary vein (preload), vascular resistance
    (afterload), and contractility relaxation
    (cardiac).

9
Clinical Features
  • HFpEF is triggered by the cumulative expression
    of various risk factors and comorbidities,
    including
  • age, sex (female), physical inactivity, obesity,
  • AF, CAD, Hypertension,
  • diabetes, dyslipidemia, metabolic syndrome,
  • chronic kidney disease, anemia,
  • chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and
    sleep-disordered breathing.

10
Pathophysiology
  • HFpEF is associated with endothelial
    inflammation, leading to coronary microvascular
    dysfunction.
  • Endothelial dysfunction is a significant factor
    linking cardiac and extracardiac effectors.

11
Pathophysiology
  • The changed composition and structure of both
    cardiomyocytes and noncardiomyocytes can increase
    diastolic stiffness and promote HFpEF development.

12
Pathophysiology
  • A recent hypothesis regarding pathophysiology in
    HFpEF suggests that coronary microvascular
    inflammation, rather than afterload mismatch, is
    the primary driver of fibrosis and cardiomyocyte
    hypertrophy.
  • Co-morbidities such as obesity and ageing
    contribute to a chronic systemic proinflammatory
    state, resulting in coronary microvascular
    inflammation, NO dysregulation and oxidative
    stress.
  • This process ultimately stimulates cardiomyocyte
    stiffness due to both hypertrophy and titin
    hypophosphorylation, as well as triggering
    myofibroblast activation and interstitial
    fibrosis.

13
Pathophysiology
  • Both obesity and diabetes are accompanied by
    increased epicardial adipose tissue volume, which
    transduces the effects of these diseases on
    cardiac function and structure.
  • Both obesity and diabetes lead to an inflammatory
    and fibrotic atrial and ventricular myopathy, the
    two major elements of HFpEF.

14
Pathophysiology
  • Obesity and diabetes increase the risk of
    exercise intolerance and promote rapid
    progression of HFpEF due to multimorbidity,
    impaired chronotropic reserve, left ventricular
    hypertrophy, and activation of inflammatory,
    pro-oxidative, vasoconstrictor, and profibrotic
    pathways.

15
Pathophysiology
  • Although LVEF is not reduced, increased
    LV-filling pressure results in exertional dyspnea
    and exercise intolerance.

16
Pathophysiology
  • AF may be the first indicator of an inflammatory
    or metabolic LA myopathy causing HFpEF
  • AF reflects the development of myocardial
    inflammation, fibrosis, and hypertrophy in
    parallel with atrial and ventricular myopathy
    that results in HFpEF.

17
Pathophysiology
  • Cardiometabolic abnormalities, such as abnormal
    mitochondrial function, changed substrate
    utilization, and intracellular calcium overload,
    are also considered pathophysiological mechanisms
    in HFpEF.

18
Pathophysiology
  • Aging promotes coronary microvascular endothelial
    abnormalities and myocardial remodeling and
    dysfunction in HFpEF.

19
  • European Society of Cardiology and American
    Heart Association three criteria for the
    diagnosis of HFPEF
  • 1-clinical signs and/or symptoms of HF,
  • 2- normal or mild reduction of systolic with left
    ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (LVEF) gt 50
    with normal size of LV (LV end-diastolic volume
    index lt 97 mL/m2), and
  • 3- evidence of reduced diastolic LV function.
  • (This is usually determined by echocardiography
    (abnormalities of the mitral inflow pattern,
    tissue velocities (e), or the E/e ratio, left
    atrial volume index gt 34 mL/m2, and increased LV
    mass index) or biomarker assessment (NT-proBNP??.)

20
Diagnosis
  • Patients with increased LV-filling pressures
    related to HFpEF commonly have no elevated BNP
    levels, possibly because distensibility is
    impaired by myocardial fibrosis or due to
    coexistent obesity.
  • Most studies have suggested that around 30 of
    HFpEF patients have a BNP lt 100 pg/ml,

21
Diagnosis
  • The limited ability of echocardiographic
    variables in identifying diastolic dysfunction
    further challenges its diagnosis in clinical
    practice.

22
Diagnosis
  • Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging provides
    structural evidence of HFpEF, such as increased
    epicardial adipose tissue volume and myocardial
    fibrosis.

23
Diagnosis
  • Cardiac catheterization is the best method to
    confirm increased LV-filling pressure.

24
Prevention
  • Hypertension can obviously increase prevalence,
    rehospitalization and mortality of patients with
    HFpEF thus, treating hypertension may be the
    most effective prevention method for HFpEF.

25
Prevention
  • CAD deteriorates ventricular function and
    outcomes and increases the occurrence of HFpEF,
    and patients with CAD patients should receive
    systemic treatment, such as coronary
    revascularization.

26
Prevention
  • Tachycardia is also deleterious by shortening
    diastole time and impairing diastolic filling.
    Rate or rhythm control of AF may prevent the
    development of an underlying HFpEF.

27
Prevention
  • Anemia is related to elevated prevalence,
    hospitalization and mortality of HFpEF.

28
Prevention
  • Enhancing mitochondrial energy by iron
    supplementation prevents the development of
    HFpEF, and iron supplementation rather than
    erythropoietin is recommended.

29
Prevention
  • Lifestyle modifications, such as dietary control,
    nutrient management, physical activity, weight
    loss, and cardiorespiratory fitness, have
    beneficial effects on the prevention of HFpEF.

30
Prevention
  • Treating obesity or diabetes can affect the
    volume or function of epicardial adipose tissue.

31
Prevention
  • Both caloric restriction and physical activity
    are effective methods to improve cardiac outcomes
    in patients with HFpEF.

32
Prevention
  • Weight loss reduces the risk of HFpEF, lowers
    elevated diastolic filling pressure, and
    alleviates epicardial adipose inflammation.

33
Treatment
  • Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and
    angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) can
    alleviate the inflammation of adipose and
    attenuate myocardial fibrosis and remodeling.
    They improve clinical symptoms and exercise
    tolerance rather than morbidity or mortality in
    patients with HFpEF.

34
Treatment
  • Aldosterone mediates myocardial fibrosis,
    contributing to myocardial stiffness
  • Mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists fail to
    improve clinical symptoms, exercise tolerance,
    and cardiac outcomes in patients with HFpEF.

35
Treatment
  • Beta-blockers have no prognostic effect in
    patients with HFpEF .
  • Nebivolol is expetion, it has benefit, may be due
    to vasodilatory effect due to nitric
    oxide-releasing properties.The endothelial nitric
    oxide synthase -stimulating and ROS scavenging
    effects of nebivolol act synergistically to
    provide cardiovascular protection in addition to
    its ß1-antagonistic action.

36
Treatment
  • Beta3-adrenoreceptor prevents neurohormonal
    stimulation and myocardial hypertrophy .
    Stimulating Beta3-adrenoreceptor with selective
    agonist mirabegron may be studied as a treatment
    method in HfpEF.

37
Treatment
  • Cardiac glycosides, such as digoxin, cannot
    improve cardiac mortality but treat the
    tachyarrhythmia in HFpEF . However,
    atrioventricular node blocking drugs, such as
    digoxin, can exert lethal proarrhythmic effects
    independent of slowing heart rate.

38
Treatment
  • Statins can decrease epicardial adipose tissue
    volume and thereby prevent systemic inflammation
    and myocardium fibrosis. Statins reduce new-onset
    and recurrent AF and further prevent AF-related
    thromboembolic events.
  • Meanwhile, the application of Lipophilic statins
    atorvastatin is followed by improved diastolic
    dysfunction and reduced HFpEF risk.

39
Treatment
  • Natriuretic peptides activate guanylyl cyclase,
    resulting in cyclic guanosine monophosphate
    (cGMP) formation and preventing myocardial
    fibrosis due to vasodilation and diuresis . The
    addition of neprilysin inhibition to ARBs
    sacubitril/valsartan angiotensin
    receptor-neprilysin inhibitor (ARNI) ameliorates
    atrial and ventricular myopathy in patients with
    HfpEF.
  • There is evidence from a meta-analysis that
    sacubitril/valsartan in HFpEF probably reduces
    HFpEF hospitalization but probably has little or
    no effect on cardiovascular mortality and life
    quality.

40
Treatment
  • Direct nitric oxide (NO) donators, including
    organic nitrates (isosorbide-nitrate), are not
    recommended in patients with HFpEF, considering
    their disadvantages of vasodilatation and
    hypotension. They also fail to increase exercise
    tolerance and improve diastolic function.

41
Treatment
  • Soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) activators, such
    as vericiguat and riociguat, are administered in
    patients with Pul.AH. Vericiguat has recently
    been demonstrated to reduce cardiac mortality in
    patients with HFrEF.

42
Treatment
  • Metformin reduces proinflammatory adipokines and
    has anti-inflammatory roles. It reduces the risk
    of AF and improves diastolic dysfunction in HFpEF
    .

43
Treatment
  • Pioglitazone and rosiglitazone suppress atrial
    and ventricular inflammation and fibrosis and
    reduce the risk of AF and HfpEF
  • Thiazolidinediones have been associated with an
    improved diastolic filling abnormality in
    patients with diabetes. However, they promote
    sodium retention, thereby increasing cardiac
    volume. Sodium retention may aggravate cardiac
    fibrosis and hypertrophy and increases the risk
    of HFpEF.

44
Treatment
  • Sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 (SGLT2)
    inhibitors, such as dapagliflozin and
    empagliflozin, achieve significantly decreased
    primary composite endpoint of worsened HF or
    cardiac mortality in patients with HFrEF, which
    is independent of diabetes. SGLT2 inhibitors
    reduce the volume of epicardial adipose and
    cardiac events caused by HfpEF.
  • Symptoms of heart failure with preserved ejection
    fraction (HFpEF) improved with dapagliflozin
    (Forxiga).

45
Treatment
  • The results of existing evidence do not support
    the use of glucagonlike peptide-1 (GLP-1)
    agonists like liraglutide or semaglutide in HF
    with diabetes, and LIVE points out the potential
    harmful effect of liraglutide in this population.

46
Treatment
  • As an anti-fibrotic drug, pirfenidone suppresses
    the development of ventricular fibrosis and
    diastolic dysfunction through targeting
    transforming growth factor ß (TGF-ß) signaling
    pathway in pressure-overload induced HF.

47
Treatment
  • Lysyl oxidase-like 2 (Loxl2) promotes collagen's
    cross-linking and causes interstitial fibrosis.
  • Diastolic function may be improved by
    antibody-mediated inhibition of Loxl2 .
    (PXS-5382) Inhibits of Loxl2 and new
    cross-linking strategies will be assessed in the
    future.

48
Treatment
  • Systemic inflammation is the main mediator in
    HFpEF, and cytokine inhibitors have been
    considered therapeutic options.
  • Although interleukin-1 (IL-1) blockade with
    anakinra cannot improve exercise tolerance,
    canakinumab, a monoclonal antibody targeting
    IL-1ß, decreases HF hospitalization and mortality.

49
Treatment
  • Cardiolipin is a significant phospholipid in the
    inner mitochondrial membrane, and Szeto-Schiller
    (SS) peptide is an antioxidant peptide binding to
    cardiolipin.
  • Elamipretide reduces LVEDP in patients with HFpEF.

50
Treatment
  • Neladenoson bialanate, a partial adenosine A1
    receptor agonist, may benefit both cardiac and
    skeletal muscles. It enhances SERCA2a activity
    and reverses ventricular remodeling through
    improving mitochondrial function but fails to
    significantly affect exercise tolerance in
    patients with HFpEF.

51
Treatment
  • Levosimendan has positive inotropic and
    vasodilative effects through a combined effect on
    calcium sensitization and phosphodiesterase-3
    inhibition.
  • It improves inflammatory process and diastolic
    function in patients with HFrEF.

52
Treatment
  • Ivabradine (Corlanor), a drug that inhibits the I
    f channel in sinus node, has been found to
    improve LV systolic and diastolic function in an
    angiotensin II-induced HF mouse.
  • In patients with HFpEF, HR reduction with
    ivabradine did not improve outcomes. These
    findings do not support the use of ivabradine in
    HFpEF.

53
Treatment
  • Serelaxin, recombinant human relaxin might play
    a role in potential benefits in patients with
    HFPEF due to additional properties including
    antifibrosis, anti-inflammatory, and
    anti-ischemic.
  • RELAX-AHF-1 suggested that the
    serelaxin-mediated clinical responses and
    favourable changes in HF-relevant biomarkers of
    organ damage were similar in the HFpEF subgroup
    compared with that observed in patients with
    reduced ejection fraction.
  • A recent hypothesis regarding pathophysiology in
    HFpEF suggests that coronary microvascular
    inflammation, rather than afterload mismatch, is
    the primary driver of fibrosis and cardiomyocyte
    hypertrophy

54
Treatment
  • As an antianginal agent and late sodium channel
    inhibitor, ranolazine might improve LV diastolic
    function through inhibition of late sodium
    current or probably a direct effect on
    myofilament cross-bridge kinetics and myofilament
    sensitivity to calcium.
  • Ranolazine improved measures of hemodynamics but
    that there was no improvement in relaxation
    parameters.

55
Treatment
  • Meanwhile, inhaled iloprost causes an acute
    reduction of PAP in patients with HFpEF .
  • Diuretics are established drugs to treat fluid
    overload.

56
Treatment of HFpEF
  • -Sacubitril/valsartan (Entresto) 24 mg/26 mg.
    angiotensin receptor neprilysin inhibitor (ARNI).
  • -Empaglifozin (Jardiance) 10 mg, Dapaglifozin
    (Forxiga) 10 mg sodium-glucose co-transporter
    2SGLT-2 inhibitor
  • -Elamipretide (Bendavia) 40 mg
    mitochondrion-targeted antioxidant
  • -Pirfenidone (Pirfenex)) 267 mg inhibit collagen
    synthesis.
  • -Vericiguat (Verquva) 5 mg, Riociguat (Adempas) 1
    mg a stimulator of soluble guanylate cyclase
    sGC
  • -Levosimendan ( Simendan) 12.5 mg inj Ca2
    sensitizing inotropic agent
  • -Atorvustatin (Lipitor) 20 mg Lipophilic
    statins muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA)
    inhibitors. (Hydrophelic statins are not
    effectice)
  • -Canakinumab (Ilaris) 150 mg sc , a monoclonal
    antibody targeting IL-1ß, anti-inflammatory. Dose
    related.
  • -Serelaxin (Reasanz)1mg/ml Recombinant human
    relaxin has anti-fibrotic effects.
  • -Metformin (Glucophage) 500 mg lowering
    titin-based passive stiffness.
  • -Nebivolol ( Bystolic ) Nebivolol is a 3rd
    generation BBHas very high B1 selectivity and
    endothelial nitric oxide synthase -stimulating
    and ROS scavenging effects.

57
.
  • THANKS
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