98%
921
2 minutes
20
: Telemonitoring aimed at detecting subclinical heart failure and facilitating medication up-titration offers a promising approach to reducing heart failure hospitalizations. Our team has recently developed a non-invasive metric called "respiratory stability time (RST)", which quantifies respiratory instability, a surrogate marker of subclinical worsening heart failure. A decrease in RST below 20 s predicts the onset of worsening heart failure within 28 days. However, the clinical utility of RST-guided management in reducing mortality and heart failure hospitalizations remains uncertain. : The Innovative Tele-Monitoring Environment To Halt Ongoing Deterioration of Heart Failure-III (ITMETHOD-HF-III) is a non-blinded, interventional, multicenter, single-arm study. Eighty heart failure patients with a history of at least two prior hospitalizations for heart failure will be enrolled. After validating the robustness of RST measurements, participants will be monitored for 1.5 years through daily RST measurements. Mandatory up-titration of heart failure medications will be started if RST values decrease below 20 s for two consecutive days or decrease progressively below 30 s over 10-90 days from RST values above 45 s maintained for over 1 month, irrespective of the presence of heart failure signs/symptoms. Medication adjustment will continue until RST exceeds 30 s. The study will compare a composite endpoint of heart failure hospitalization and cardiac death between the present RST-guided group and a historical control group from the ITMETHOD-HF-II trial, in which management was based on patients' symptoms. We anticipate that the precent ITMETHOD-HF-III study will demonstrate that mandatory, RST-guided heart failure management significantly reduces the incidence of the primary composite endpoint-heart failure hospitalization and cardiac death-compared with symptom-guided standard care in the historical control group (ITMETHOD-HF-II). : The ITMETHOD-HF-III study aims to demonstrate the clinical efficacy of RST-guided management in reducing heart failure hospitalization rates and cardiac mortality by enabling early detection of subclinical heart failure and facilitating timely medication adjustments, irrespective of heart failure signs/symptoms. If successful, RST-guided management could establish a new standard for telemonitoring heart failure patients in outpatient settings.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12250705 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm14134653 | DOI Listing |
Eur J Heart Fail
September 2025
Cardiology Department, University Medical Centre Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Aims: There is a lack of data from randomized clinical trials comparing treatment outcomes between conduction system pacing (CSP) modalities and biventricular pacing (BVP) in symptomatic patients with refractory atrial fibrillation (AF) scheduled for atrioventricular node ablation (AVNA). The CONDUCT-AF investigates whether CSP is non-inferior to BVP in improving left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) and clinical outcomes in heart failure (HF) patients with symptomatic AF undergoing AVNA.
Methods: This study is an investigator-initiated, prospective, randomized, multicentre clinical trial conducted across 10 European centres, enrolling 82 patients with symptomatic AF, HF with reduced LVEF, and narrow QRS.
JAMA Netw Open
September 2025
Division of Cardiology, Department of Internal Medicine, New Taipei Municipal TuCheng Hospital, New Taipei, Taiwan.
Importance: The cardiovascular benefits of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) may vary by body mass index (BMI), but evidence on BMI-specific outcomes remains limited.
Objective: To investigate the associations of GLP-1 RA use with cardiovascular and kidney outcomes across BMI categories in patients with type 2 diabetes.
Design, Setting, And Participants: This retrospective cohort study used the Chang Gung Research Database, a clinical dataset covering multiple hospitals in Taiwan.
Curr Opin Cardiol
August 2025
National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London.
Purpose Of Review: Symptom relief is now recognized as the primary remit of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in patients with stable coronary artery disease. The relationship between the nature of angina symptoms and the likelihood of successful symptom relief from PCI had not been systematically studied until recently.
Recent Findings: The ORBITA-2 symptom-stratified analysis found that while the severity and nature of symptoms were poorly associated with the severity of coronary disease, the nature of the symptoms powerfully predicted the efficacy of PCI in relieving angina.
Cardiol Rev
September 2025
From the Department of General Medicine, J.S.S. Medical College, JSS Academy of Higher Education and Research, Mysuru, India.
Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) accounts for nearly half of all heart failure cases and is increasing in prevalence due to aging populations and comorbidities such as hypertension and diabetes. While echocardiography remains the diagnostic cornerstone, many patients with preserved ejection fraction present with nonspecific symptoms and ambiguous diastolic indices, leading to diagnostic uncertainty and therapeutic delay. Arterial stiffness-quantified by pulse wave velocity, augmentation index, and cardio-ankle vascular index)-is emerging as a key contributor to HFpEF pathophysiology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCardiovasc Res
September 2025
Department of Advanced Medical and Surgical Sciences, University of Campania 'Luigi Vanvitelli', Piazza Miraglia, 2, Naples 80138, Italy.