SGLT2 inhibitors in patients with heart failure: a comprehensive meta-analysis of five randomised controlled trials
Harvard University · Brigham and Women's Hospital · +12 more institutions
Abstract
SGLT2 inhibitors are strongly recommended in guidelines to treat patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction, but their clinical benefits at higher ejection fractions are less well established. Two large-scale trials, DELIVER and EMPEROR-Preserved, in heart failure with mildly reduced or preserved ejection fraction have been done, providing power to examine therapeutic effects on cardiovascular mortality and in patient subgroups when combined with the earlier trials in reduced ejection fraction.
We did a prespecified meta-analysis of DELIVER and EMPEROR-Preserved, and subsequently included trials that enrolled patients with reduced ejection fraction (DAPA-HF and EMPEROR-Reduced) and those admitted to hospital with worsening heart failure, irrespective of ejection fraction (SOLOIST-WHF). Using trial-level data with harmonised endpoint definitions, we did a fixed-effects meta-analysis to estimate the effect of SGLT2 inhibitors on various clinical endpoints in heart failure The primary endpoint for this meta-analysis was time from randomisation to the occurrence of the composite of cardiovascular death or hospitalisation for heart failure. We assessed heterogeneity in treatment effects for the primary endpoint across subgroups of interest. This study is registered with PROSPERO, CRD42022327527.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 107.14
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 24
Authors
14- MVMuthiah Vaduganathan
Harvard University, Brigham and Women's Hospital
- KFKieran F. Docherty
University of Glasgow, British Heart Foundation
- BCBrian Claggett
Harvard University, Brigham and Women's Hospital
- PSPardeep S. Jhund
University of Glasgow, British Heart Foundation
- RARudolf A. de Boer
University of Groningen
Topics & keywords
- Heart failure
- Ejection fraction
- Medicine
- Hazard ratio
- Internal medicine
- Clinical endpoint
- Cardiology
- Meta-analysis
- Good health and well-being