Skip to content
Health News Digest.
Menu
Menu

Heart Dailure Drugs Beneficial Even in Presence of Kidney Disease

Posted on May 23, 2015

Karolinska_Inst_9.gif

(HealthNewsDigest.com) – 23 MAY 2015 – A novel study from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden suggests that RAS-antagonists, common drugs for patients with heart failure, may benefit also patients who have concomitant kidney disease, a group previously not studied. The findings are being presented today at the annual congress of European heart failure specialists in Seville, Spain.

These drugs have proven effect in heart failure, but patients with kidney disease were excluded from clinical trials due to fear of kidney complications. While kidney complications are still a potential concern, this new study, which is presented at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology Heart Failure Association, and published concurrently in the European Heart Journal, suggests that the net effect may be beneficial.

In the current study, a Swedish team comprising researchers at Karolinska Institutet, Linköping University, Stockholm South General Hospital, and Karolinska University Hospital analysed data from 24,000 patients from the nationwide Swedish Heart Failure Registry (SwedeHF). Patients with heart failure and chronic kidney disease who were treated with RAS-antagonists (ACE-inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers) had better survival than un-treated patients. The difference persisted after adjustment for a large number of other factors, such as patient age and measures of general health, and the final decrease in mortality was 24 percent. The reduction in mortality was similar to that in patients without kidney disease which was in turn similar to that in randomized trials.

“This study was large and rigorous but cannot prove that RAS-antagonists are beneficial”,says Dr Lars Lund, of Karolinska Institutet, who led the study. “It provides a rationale for performing large-scale randomized trials with this inexpensive category of drugs for the common combination of heart failure and kidney disease. Indeed, Swedish health care and national population registries provide an ideal setting for a novel concept, so called registry-randomized trials.”

The work was financed by the Swedish Research Council, The Swedish Heart-Lung Foundation, the Stockholm County Council and the Swedish Association of Local Authorities and Regions.

Publication: ‘Association between renin-angiotensin system antagonist use and mortality in heart failure with severe renal insufficiency – a prospective propensity score-matched cohort study’, Lars H Lund, Lina Benson, Ulf Dahlström, Magnus Edner, European Heart Journal, 23 May 2015.

###

For advertising/promotionCall Mike McCurdy at: 877-634-9180, or email [email protected]

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Archive

Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Sign up for our Newsletter
For Email Marketing you can trust

Recent Posts

  • As Foundation for ‘Excited Delirium’ Diagnosis Cracks, Fallout Spreads
  • Millions in Opioid Settlement Funds Sit Untouched as Overdose Deaths Rise
  • Sign Up for Well’s 6-Day Energy Challenge
  • William P. Murphy Jr., Innovator of Life-Saving Medical Tools, Dies at 100
  • How Abigail Echo-Hawk Uses Indigenous Data to Close the Equity Gap

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

Categories

©2026 Health News Digest. | Design: Newspaperly WordPress Theme