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ELEVATE Early LEvosimendan Vs Usual Care in Advanced Chronic hearT failurE

Early Use of Levosimendan Compared to Usual Care in Advanced Chronic Heart Failure (ACHF)

Status
Terminated
Phases
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01290146
Acronym
ELEVATE
Enrollment
13
Registered
2011-02-04
Start date
2011-02-28
Completion date
2017-03-31
Last updated
2017-04-10

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Advanced Chronic Heart Failure

Keywords

Heart Failure, Levosimendan, Inotropic agents, Phosphodiesterase Inhibitors, Vasodilators, Diuretics

Brief summary

The purpose of this study is to compare in patients with Advanced Chronic Heart Failure the effects of Levosimendan versus diuretic (single 24-hour infusion) applied at the early detection of impending destabilization on hospitalization-free survival during 12 months. Patients with advanced chronic heart failure (ACHF) have a short term reduced life expectancy with recurrent hospital admissions for clinical exacerbations. Levosimendan improves contractility by calcium-dependent binding to troponin C, determines vasodilation of the coronary arteries and systemic resistance vessels, thus decreasing preload and afterload, while exerting a protective effect on the myocardium against ischemia-reperfusion damage. In randomized clinical trials of acute heart failure patients, levosimendan improved hemodynamics and patients' quality of life and decreased natriuretic peptide plasma levels, with no excess mortality The study will assess whether the administration of levosimendan (single 24-hour infusion) at the early detection of deterioration may reduce frequency and duration of hospital admissions, improve functional status and quality of life in ACHF patients, with respect to diuretic infusion.

Detailed description

BACKGROUND Patients with advanced chronic heart failure (ACHF) have a short term reduced life expectancy with recurrent hospital admissions for clinical exacerbations. ACHF poses a heavy burden to cardiology departments, where these patients are referred for the severity of their clinical condition, which require a specialist approach, and results in high health care costs due to frequent rehospitalizations. Patients with ACHF ≥ 2 hospital admissions in 6 months are at high risk of recurrent exacerbations. The benefits of strict outpatient follow-up at specialised HF vs standard community care in ACHF patients have been consistently demonstrated. The standard approach at HF clinics is based on flexible diuretic dose and outpatient iv diuretics as bolus or infusion at early signs of decompensation. Although this strategy results in symptomatic benefit and prevents approximately one third of hospital admission for acute exacerbations, a relevant proportion of patients will still need hospitalization. Predictors of lack of benefit are low systolic blood pressure, prior increase in oral diuretics and beta-blocker use, which taken together represent markers of severe disease susceptible to evolve in a low output state. In the HF clinic setting, a novel strategy for these patients, to include early support to myocardial contractility, i.e. before compelling criteria for hospital admission become manifest, might prevent further prolonged hospitalizations, myocardial damage and impairment in renal function TRIAL RATIONALE Levosimendan improved hemodynamics and patients' quality of life and decreased natriuretic peptide plasma levels, with no excess mortality, in randomized clinical trials of acute heart failure. In SURVIVE an early larger treatment effect of levosimendan was apparent in patients with acute worsening of chronic HF treatment than in those with de novo disease, possibly because a greater proportion of these patients may be on beta-blockers, that are known to interfere with dobutamine or may potentiate the circulatory actions of levosimendan. Thus levosimendan may be unattractive first-line agent in destabilized ACHF patients on beta-blockers. Based on the drug cardioprotective properties, hemodynamic and neurohormonal effects, we propose a novel therapeutic approach for the clinically-driven use of levosimendan in recurrent acute exacerbations of ACHF. Dosing of the drug will omit the bolus to increase tolerability in this severely ill patient population.

Interventions

Patients randomized to diuretics receive a 24-hour diuretic infusion with a maximum cumulative dose up to 200 mg furosemide/24 h

DRUGLevosimendan

Patients randomized to Levosimendan receive a 24-hour levosimendan infusion with NO prior bolus injection. Starting doses will be based on baseline SBP levels * SBP ≥ 85-99mmHg: 0.05 mcg/kg/min * SBP ≥100 mmHg: 0.1 mcg/kg/min

Sponsors

Orion Corporation, Orion Pharma
CollaboratorINDUSTRY
Niguarda Hospital
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Subject)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Written informed consent * Systolic dysfunction (LVEF ≤ 35% by echo assessment within 6 months before enrolment) * No requirement for hospital admission for diagnostic work up or elective treatment to define etiology and/or treatment plan * Already on optimal standard HF treatment based on individual tolerance, including cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT)/ICD device according to current guidelines * At least 2 hospital admissions for HF in the 6 months before enrolment, the most recent one within 30-90 days before enrolment with requirement for inotrope administration

Exclusion criteria

* Participant in other studies in the last 30 days * Life expectancy \< 1 year for comorbid conditions other than HF * Pregnancy, lactation, childbearing potential unless on adequate contraception * Acute coronary syndromes, percutaneous or surgical revascularization, valve surgery performed within 8 weeks before enrolment * Planned percutaneous or surgical procedures (except for heart transplantation) * CRT within 6 months before enrolment * Cardiogenic shock * Supine systolic BP \< 85 mmHg * Severe liver insufficiency (\>three-fold increase in AST-ALT ) * Sever chronic kidney dysfunction (estimated GFR \< 30 ml/min) * Sustained ventricular tachycardia * Severe chronic or current acute infection (temperature \>38 C, WBC \>15,000/mm3) * Severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (FEV1 \<30% predicted or on oxygen therapy) * Severe persistent anemia (Hb \< 10 g/l)) * ACHF exacerbation due to conditions requiring specific treatment (e.g. anemia, atrial fibrillation, supraventricular tachycardia ) Documented low compliance or unavailable for programmed follow-up visits and phone contact

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
Number of days alive free of Transplant and out-of-hospital (DAOH)Measured at 12 months

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
All cause mortality, hospital readmission and unscheduled office and emergency department visits for ADCHFMeasured at 12 monthsA combination of all cause hospital admissions/death/urgent heart transplantation/LV assist device implantation
BNP changesMeasured at at end-of- study and at each eventual destabilizationPercent changes in BNP vs baseline
Number of hospital admissions for acute worsening HFMeasured at 12 monthsNumber of hospital admissions for acute worsening HF
Incidence of acute renal dysfunctionMeasured at at 24 hours since inception of randomized treatment for acute worsening HFproportion of subjects who develop AKIN stage 1 (increase \> 0.3 mg/dl or \> 25% in serum creatinine from previous visit)
Treatment-related adverse eventsMeasured at 12 monthsdeath, hospital a dimission, emergency room or clinic unscheduled visits
Adverse changes in blood pressure or heart rateMeasured at 24 hours after iv treatmentHypotension (\< 90 mmHg), tachycardia (\> 110 bpm)
ECG changesMeasured at 24 hours after iv treatmentRhythm, rate, conduction disturbances, ventricular arrhythmias, repolarization changes
CostsMeasured at 12 monthsDirect health care costs for days in hospital, supplementary visits, drug treatment

Countries

Italy

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026