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Short-Term Therapies for Treatment of Acute and Advanced Heart Failure—Why so Few Drugs Available in Clinical Use, Why Even Fewer in the Pipeline?

Authors :
Leo M. A. Heunks
Mehmet Yilmaz
Cândida Fonseca
Gerhard Pölzl
Bojan Vrtovec
Pentti Põder
Tuvia Ben Gal
Alexandre Mebazaa
Alexander Parkhomenko
John Parissis
Sundeep Kaul
Alexandr A. Eremenko
Jacek Kubica
Visnja Ivancan
Trygve Husebye
Josep Comín-Colet
Matthias Heringlake
Vladimir Cerny
Zoltán Papp
Dimitrios Farmakis
Antoine Herpain
Veli-Pekka Harjola
Dominique Bettex
Henning Mølgaard
Piero Pollesello
Kristian Karason
Francesco Fedele
HUS Emergency Medicine and Services
Department of Diagnostics and Therapeutics
University of Helsinki
University of Zurich
Pollesello, Piero
Intensive care medicine
ACS - Pulmonary hypertension & thrombosis
Source :
Pollesello, P, Ben Gal, T, Bettex, D, Cerny, V, Comin-Colet, J, Eremenko, A A, Farmakis, D, Fedele, F, Fonseca, C, Harjola, V-P, Herpain, A, Heringlake, M, Heunks, L, Husebye, T, Ivancan, V, Karason, K, Kaul, S, Kubica, J, Mebazaa, A, Mølgaard, H, Parissis, J, Parkhomenko, A, Põder, P, Pölzl, G, Vrtovec, B, Yilmaz, M B & Papp, Z 2019, ' Short-Term Therapies for Treatment of Acute and Advanced Heart Failure—Why so Few Drugs Available in Clinical Use, Why Even Fewer in the Pipeline? ', Journal of Clinical Medicine, vol. 8, no. 11, pp. 1834 . https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm8111834, Journal of Clinical Medicine, Journal of Clinical Medicine, Vol 8, Iss 11, p 1834 (2019), Journal of Clinical Medicine, 8 (11, Journal of Clinical Medicine, 8(11)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Both acute and advanced heart failure are an increasing threat in term of survival, quality of life and socio-economical burdens. Paradoxically, the use of successful treatments for chronic heart failure can prolong life but—per definition—causes the rise in age of patients experiencing acute decompensations, since nothing at the moment helps avoiding an acute or final stage in the elderly population. To complicate the picture, acute heart failure syndromes are a collection of symptoms, signs and markers, with different aetiologies and different courses, also due to overlapping morbidities and to the plethora of chronic medications. The palette of cardio-and vasoactive drugs used in the hospitalization phase to stabilize the patient’s hemodynamic is scarce and even scarcer is the evidence for the agents commonly used in the practice (e.g. catecholamines). The pipeline in this field is poor and the clinical development chronically unsuccessful. Recent set backs in expected clinical trials for new agents in acute heart failure (AHF) (omecamtiv, serelaxine, ularitide) left a field desolately empty, where only few drugs have been approved for clinical use, for example, levosimendan and nesiritide. In this consensus opinion paper, experts from 26 European countries (Austria, Belgium, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Israel, Italy, The Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, U.K. and Ukraine) analyse the situation in details also by help of artificial intelligence applied to bibliographic searches, try to distil some lesson-learned to avoid that future projects would make the same mistakes as in the past and recommend how to lead a successful development project in this field in dire need of new agents.<br />SCOPUS: re.j<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20493630
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pollesello, P, Ben Gal, T, Bettex, D, Cerny, V, Comin-Colet, J, Eremenko, A A, Farmakis, D, Fedele, F, Fonseca, C, Harjola, V-P, Herpain, A, Heringlake, M, Heunks, L, Husebye, T, Ivancan, V, Karason, K, Kaul, S, Kubica, J, Mebazaa, A, Mølgaard, H, Parissis, J, Parkhomenko, A, Põder, P, Pölzl, G, Vrtovec, B, Yilmaz, M B & Papp, Z 2019, ' Short-Term Therapies for Treatment of Acute and Advanced Heart Failure—Why so Few Drugs Available in Clinical Use, Why Even Fewer in the Pipeline? ', Journal of Clinical Medicine, vol. 8, no. 11, pp. 1834 . https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm8111834, Journal of Clinical Medicine, Journal of Clinical Medicine, Vol 8, Iss 11, p 1834 (2019), Journal of Clinical Medicine, 8 (11, Journal of Clinical Medicine, 8(11)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1115eae774dfeaf4f19b909731027841
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm8111834