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Sacubitril-Valsartan Initiation in Chronic Heart Failure Patients Impacts Sleep Apnea: The ENTRESTO-SAS Study

Dany Jaffuel, Erika Nogué, Philippe Berdagué, Michel Galinier, Pauline Fournier, Marion Dupuis, F. Georger, Marie-Pierre Cadars, Jean‐Etienne Ricci, Nathalie Plouvier, François Picard, Vincent Puel, Jean‐Pierre Mallet, Carey Suehs, Nicolas Molinari, Arnaud Bourdin, François Roubille

2021ESC Heart Failure34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Aims Optimizing medical cardiac treatment for sleep apnoea (SA) in patients with chronic heart failure and reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) is an expert Grade C recommendation based on six studies encompassing a total of 67 patients only. Whether sacubitril–valsartan (SV), a cornerstone of HFrEF medical treatment, impacts SA is unknown and requires evaluation. Methods and results The ENTRESTO-SAS trial is a six-centre, prospective, open-label real-life cohort study (NCT02916160). Ambulatory patients eligible for SV (i.e. HFrEF adults who remain symptomatic despite optimal treatment) were evaluated before and after 3 months of SV (including nocturnal ventilatory polygraphy); 118 patients were final analysed [median age was 66 (IQ25–75: 56–73) years, 81.4% male, 36.5% New York Heart Association III–IV, N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide level of 1564 (701–3376) ng/L, left ventricular ejection fraction of 30 (25–34)%, 60.7% ischaemic HFrEF, 97.5% initially treated with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin II receptor blockers, 83.9% with beta-blockers, 64.4% with mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists, and 74.6% with diuretics]. Three groups were defined according to initial central/obstructive apnoea–hypopnoea indices (AHIs): G1 (n = 49, AHIcentral ≥ 5/h and AHIobstructive < 15/h); G2 (n = 27, AHIobstructive ≥ 15/h); and G3 (n = 42, AHIcentral < 5/h and AHIobstructive < 15/h). At 3 months, the AHI (main predefined outcome) decreased significantly by −7.10/h (IQ25–75: −16.10 to 0.40; P < 0.001) in G1 + G2 without positive airway pressure treatment (45 patients, median initial AHI of 24.20 (IQ25–75: 16.40–43.50)/h). Of these, 24.4% presented an AHI decrease ≥50% and 37.78% had a final AHI < 15/h (tendency for improvement from an initial value of 20%: P = 0.0574). For G1 patients (n = 37), AHI significantly decreased from a median of 22.90 (16.00–43.50)/h to 19.20 (12.70–31.10)/h (P = 0.002). For G2 patients (n = 8), AHI decreased from a median of 30.10 (26.40–47.60)/h to 22.75 (14.60–36.90)/h (statistically non-significant, P = 0.059). Conclusions In this real-life population, SV treatment for 3 months in SA patients is associated with a significant decrease in AHI. These results support the current guidelines that recommend first an optimization of the HFrEF treatment in patients with HFrEF and central SA. A potential positive airway pressure sparing effect merits further investigation.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineHeart failureSacubitril, ValsartanValsartanSleep apneaCardiologyInternal medicineCentral sleep apneaApneaPolysomnographyEjection fractionBlood pressureObstructive Sleep Apnea ResearchSleep and related disordersRestless Legs Syndrome Research
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