作者
Jacob A. Udell,Mark C. Petrie,W. Schuyler Jones,Stefan D. Anker,Josephine Harrington,Michaela Mattheus,Svenja Seide,Offer Amir,Marıa Cecilia Bahit,Johann Bauersachs,Antoni Bayés‐Genís,Yundai Chen,Vijay Chopra,Gemma A. Figtree,Junbo Ge,Shaun G. Goodman,Nina Gotcheva,Shinya Goto,Tomasz Gąsior,Waheed Jamal,James L. Januzzi,Myung Ho Jeong,Yuri Lopatin,Renato D. Lópes,Béla Merkely,Monica Martinez-Traba,Puja B. Parikh,Alexander Parkhomenko,Piotr Ponikowski,Xavier Rosselló,Morten Schou,Dragan Simić,Philippe Gabriel Steg,Joanna Szachniewicz,Peter van der Meer,Dragoş Vinereanu,Shelley Zieroth,Martina Brueckmann,Mikhail Sumin,Deepak L. Bhatt,Adrian F. Hernandez,Javed Butler
摘要
Empagliflozin reduces the risk of heart failure (HF) hospitalizations but not all-cause mortality when started within 14 days of acute myocardial infarction (AMI). To evaluate the association between left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), congestion, or both on outcomes and the impact of empagliflozin in reducing HF risk post-MI. In the EMPACT-MI trial, patients were randomized within 14 days of an AMI complicated by either newly reduced LVEF<45%, congestion, or both to empagliflozin 10 mg daily or placebo and followed for a median of 17.9 months. Among 6522 patients, the mean baseline LVEF was 41%+9%; 2648 patients (40.6%) presented with LVEF<45% alone, 1483 (22.7%) presented with congestion alone, and 2181 (33.4%) presented with both. Among patients in the placebo arm, multivariable adjusted risk for each 10-point reduction in LVEF included all-cause death or HF hospitalization (hazard ratio [HR] 1.49; 95%CI, 1.31-1.69; P<0.0001), first HF hospitalization (HR, 1.64; 95%CI, 1.37-1.96; P<0.0001), and total HF hospitalizations (rate ratio [RR], 1.89; 95%CI, 1.51-2.36; P<0.0001). Presence of congestion was also associated with a significantly higher risk for each of these outcomes (HR 1.52, 1.94, and RR 2.03, respectively). Empagliflozin reduced the risk for first (HR 0.77, 95%CI 0.60-0.98) and total (RR 0.67, 95%CI 0.50-0.89) HF hospitalization, irrespective of LVEF or congestion or both. The safety profile of empagliflozin was consistent across baseline LVEF and irrespective of congestion status. In patients with AMI, severity of LV dysfunction and the presence of congestion was associated with worse outcomes. Empagliflozin reduced first and total HF hospitalizations across the range of LVEF with and without congestion.