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(Circulation. 2008;117:526-535.)
© 2008 American Heart Association, Inc.
Heart Failure |
From Wayne State University, Detroit, Mich (J.K.G.); Veterans Administration Medical Center and University of Minnesota, Minneapolis (I.S.A.); Ohio State University, Columbus (W.T.A.); University of California at Los Angeles, Division of Cardiology (G.C.F); University of California at San Diego (B.G.); Monash University, Melbourne, Australia (H.K.); University of California at San Francisco (B.M.M.); Amgen Inc, Thousand Oaks, Calif (S.M.W., M-L.T., Y.S., B.K.); and University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada (P.A.).
Correspondence to Jalal K. Ghali, MD, University Health Center, 4201 St Antoine, 2E, Detroit, MI 48201. E-mail jghali{at}med.wayne.edu
Received March 6, 2007; accepted November 9, 2007.
| Abstract |
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Methods and Results— Patients (N=319) with symptomatic HF, left ventricular ejection fraction
40%, and hemoglobin
9.0 g/dL and
12.5 g/dL were randomized (double-blind) to placebo (N=157) or darbepoetin alfa (N=162) subcutaneously every 2 weeks for 1 year (target hemoglobin, 14.0±1.0 g/dL). The primary end point was change from baseline to week 27 in treadmill exercise time. Secondary end points were change from baseline in New York Heart Association class and quality of life at week 27. An additional prespecified efficacy analysis included the time to death by any cause or first HF-related hospitalization by 1 year. At baseline, the median (interquartile range) hemoglobin was 11.4 (10.9, 12.0) g/dL. At week 27, darbepoetin alfa treatment increased median (interquartile range) hemoglobin by 1.8 (1.1, 2.5) g/dL (placebo, 0.3 [–0.2, 1.0] g/dL; P<0.001). Of the patients treated with darbepoetin alfa, 85% achieved 2 consecutive hemoglobin levels of 14.0±1.0 g/dL during the study and experienced a hemoglobin increase of
1.0 g/dL from baseline. By intent-to-treat analysis, darbepoetin alfa treatment did not significantly improve exercise duration, New York Heart Association class, or quality of life score compared with placebo. A nonsignificant trend was observed toward a lower risk of all-cause mortality or first HF hospitalization in darbepoetin alfa–treated patients compared with placebo (hazard ratio, 0.68; 95% CI, 0.43, 1.08; P=0.10). Occurrences of adverse events were similar in both treatment groups.
Conclusions— In this study of patients with symptomatic HF and anemia, treatment with darbepoetin alfa was not associated with significant clinical benefits. Darbepoetin alfa treatment was well tolerated and effectively raised hemoglobin. A trend of lower risk of morbidity and mortality was observed.
Key Words: anemia exercise heart failure hemoglobin trials
| Introduction |
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Clinical Perspective p 535
Preliminary, single-center, open-label studies in HF patients have shown that treatment of anemia with erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) in patients with HF may improve exercise capacity14 and cardiac and renal function and reduce the need for hospitalization and diuretic use.3,15 Although encouraging, these small studies were relatively short in duration and not designed to provide conclusive data on the safety or clinical efficacy of ESA treatment. Nonetheless, together with the strong association of anemia with poor outcomes, these data support the hypothesis that treatment of anemia might improve functional status and clinical outcomes in HF patients.
The Study of Anemia in Heart Failure Trial (STAMINA-HeFT) was designed as a proof-of-concept study to examine the clinical impact of anemia treatment in a symptomatic, anemic HF population with darbepoetin alfa, a long-acting ESA that stimulates erythropoiesis in the same manner as endogenous erythropoietin.16 To date, STAMINA-HeFT is the largest randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study to evaluate the tolerability and efficacy of treatment of anemia in HF patients.
| Methods |
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21 years of age and had symptomatic HF for
3 months at the time of enrollment. Key inclusion criteria were as follows: treadmill exercise duration at baseline (based on at least 2 screening tests), with the use of a modified Naughton protocol,17 between 2 and 14 minutes (for patients aged
60 years) and between 2 and 12 minutes (for patients aged >60 years), with a rating of perceived exertion of
13 ("somewhat hard") on the Borg scale18; left ventricular ejection fraction
40% within the previous 12 weeks; a mean of 2 screening hemoglobin concentrations of
9.0 and
12.5 g/dL; transferrin saturation
15.0%; serum vitamin B12 and folate levels at or above the lower limit of the normal range; treatment for HF with an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor and/or angiotensin receptor blocker, unless not tolerated, for
8 weeks, without dose change for
4 weeks; and, if used, β-blocker treatment for
8 weeks, without dose change for
4 weeks. Exclusion criteria were as follows: resting blood pressure >160/100 mm Hg; unstable angina pectoris and/or recent myocardial infarction (within 3 months of randomization); severe uncorrected valvular disease or left ventricular outflow obstruction; major surgery and organ transplantation; likelihood of cardiac transplantation within 6 months after randomization; uncontrolled arrhythmias; active and systemic hematologic diseases; anemia due to acute or chronic bleeding; current malignancy; chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy within 12 weeks; ESA therapy; whole blood or red blood cell transfusion within 12 weeks of intended randomization; serum creatinine >3.0 mg/dL; and contraindication to iron therapy.
The study protocol was approved by the central institutional review board or the locally appointed ethics committee at each participating study site, and all patients gave their written informed consent. Enrollment started in July 2002; the last patient completed the study in February 2005.
Study Design
This was a multicenter (65 centers), double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled phase 2 study. Eligible patients with symptomatic HF and anemia were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive darbepoetin alfa (starting dose, 0.75 µg/kg) or placebo subcutaneously every 2 weeks for a total of 52 weeks. The randomization scheme was centrally held, computer-generated, and stratified by study center.
The primary study end point was the change in exercise tolerance from baseline to week 27, as measured by treadmill exercise duration. Secondary efficacy end points were the change from baseline to week 27 in New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional classification and health-related quality of life, as measured by the Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire19 and the Patients Global Assessment of Change.20 Additional end points included time to death by any cause or first HF hospitalization. Safety was monitored by the occurrence of adverse events throughout the study, changes in laboratory parameters (including hemoglobin), vital signs at each visit, and seroreactivity to ESAs.
Patients and personnel at the study site were blinded to the treatment. Darbepoetin alfa (Aranesp, 200 µg/mL; Amgen Inc, Thousand Oaks, Calif) or matching placebo was provided in single-dose vials. After initial administration, darbepoetin alfa doses were titrated to achieve a gradual rise in hemoglobin concentration. Once hemoglobin had reached
13.0 g/dL and had increased by
1.5 g/dL from baseline, the darbepoetin alfa dose was reduced by 25%. Doses were then adjusted to maintain hemoglobin concentrations within the target range of 14.0±1.0 g/dL. To maintain the blind, doses were adjusted in a similar fashion for placebo patients on the basis of hemoglobin modeling data, independent of the actual blinded hemoglobin concentration during the study. All hemoglobin measurements were made at a central laboratory. An interactive voice response system provided instructions to each site on dose adjustments for darbepoetin alfa and, to maintain the blind, instructions for volume changes for placebo to imitate active dose titration. To maintain the blind, daily elemental oral iron was administered unless baseline ferritin was >800 ng/mL. Patients continued to receive optimal concomitant therapy for HF during the study.
Study Assessments
Hemoglobin concentrations were measured weekly during screening and for the first 12 weeks of treatment and until 4 consecutive hemoglobin measurements were in the target range; every 2 weeks thereafter; and at the end-of-study visit (2 weeks after the last dose at week 53 or on withdrawal). Exercise duration was measured weekly during screening and at weeks 13 and 27, with the use of a modified Naughton protocol.17 The level of exertion was recorded with the use of the rating of perceived exertion scale (from 6 to 20; light to hard).18 Hematology, blood chemistry, serum iron, total iron-binding capacity, transferrin saturation, and ferritin were measured by a central laboratory at screening; at weeks 9, 17, 27, and 39; and at the end-of-study visit (study week 53). NYHA class was assessed at study weeks 1, 9, 13, 17, 27, 39, and at the end-of-study visit; QOL assessments occurred at study weeks 1, 13, 27, and 53. Adverse events were recorded throughout the study. A telephone follow-up for mortality was conducted at week 55 after patients terminated the study. Reported deaths and hospitalizations were adjudicated by an independent end point adjudication committee. Anti-erythropoietic seroreactivity assays were performed before administration of the first dose of study drug (week 1), at week 27, and at the end-of-study visit.
Statistical Analysis
The sample size of 300 patients provided >80% power to detect a treatment effect of
60 seconds for the primary end point of change from baseline in exercise duration at week 27, assuming an SD of 150 seconds, a 20% dropout rate, and a 5% 2-sided significance level. Efficacy analyses were based on the intent-to-treat analysis set (all patients randomly assigned to a treatment group). The analysis of quality of life parameters was based on available data without imputation. Safety analyses included all randomly assigned patients who received at least 1 dose of study drug.
The primary analysis compared change from baseline at week 27 in exercise duration between the darbepoetin alfa and placebo groups. A repeated-measures ANCOVA mixed-effects model was applied with the use of available data with no imputation; treatment was the main effect, baseline exercise duration was a covariate, and a random patient intercept and unstructured covariance matrix were used. Although randomization was stratified by study center, this variable was not included as a fixed effect in the model because of the small number of patients at many centers. However, sensitivity analyses including pooled center as a fixed or random effect in the model showed similar results. For continuous secondary end points, comparisons between the darbepoetin alfa and placebo groups were made with ANCOVA, adjusted for baseline value unless otherwise indicated. For categorical variables, a logistic regression model was fitted, or a 2-group
2 test of equal proportions between treatment groups was performed. The analysis of time to death by any cause or first HF hospitalization was performed with a 2-sided log-rank test. Hazard ratios and their CIs were estimated with a Cox proportional hazards model. Results are presented without adjustment for baseline covariates. Similar results were observed after adjustment for baseline covariates. Standard summary statistics were calculated for each variable. Results were considered to be nominally statistically significant if P<0.05.
A post hoc exploratory analysis of change from baseline in exercise tolerance by change in hemoglobin was performed with a repeated-measures, mixed-effects model adjusted for baseline exercise duration, and Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated. These analyses were performed on a subset of patients who participated in the study for at least 17 weeks.
All data are held by the study sponsor (Amgen Inc). The authors had full access to and take responsibility for the integrity of the data. All authors have read and agreed to the manuscript as written.
| Results |
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Change in Hemoglobin
Median (IQR) baseline hemoglobin concentrations were similar in the darbepoetin alfa and placebo groups, respectively (Table 1). Hemoglobin concentrations were approximately normally distributed; median (IQR) values for change in hemoglobin over time for both treatment groups are shown in Figure 2. In patients receiving darbepoetin alfa, median hemoglobin change from baseline increased gradually, reaching
1.5 g/dL from baseline by 12 to 14 weeks of treatment. Target hemoglobin concentrations for the darbepoetin alfa–treated patients were sustained for the duration of the study after the hemoglobin titration phase: At week 27, the median (IQR) hemoglobin was 13.4 (12.4, 14.2) g/dL, and the median (IQR) change from baseline was 1.8 (1.1, 2.5) g/dL compared with 0.3 (–0.2, 1.0) g/dL in the placebo group (P<0.001); at week 53, the median (IQR) hemoglobin was 13.6 (13.1, 14.4) g/dL, and the median (IQR) change from baseline was 2.1 (1.3, 2.8) g/dL compared with 0.5 (–0.3, 1.2) g/dL in the placebo group (P<0.001). Eighty-five percent (n=137) of darbepoetin alfa–treated patients achieved the target hemoglobin range during the study and experienced a hemoglobin increase of
1.0 g/dL from baseline; of those receiving placebo, 19% (n=30) reached the target.
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Primary End Point: Exercise Tolerance
Exercise tolerance was measured by exercise duration with the use of maximal exercise treadmill tests. At baseline, the mean (SD) achieved exercise duration was similar for patients in both treatment groups: 409 (170) seconds in the placebo group (N=157) versus 408 (165) seconds in the darbepoetin alfa group (N=162). At week 27, the mean (SD) change in exercise duration was 45.6 (126.4) seconds in the placebo group (N=124) compared with 58.4 (111.1) seconds in the darbepoetin alfa group (N=136). In the primary analysis with the use of a repeated-measures, mixed-effects model adjusted for baseline exercise duration, there was no statistically significant difference between the placebo group and the darbepoetin alfa group in the adjusted mean (95% CI) change from baseline in exercise duration at week 27: 46.5 (25.9, 67.2) versus 57.3 (37.5, 77.1); P=0.46 (Figure 3).
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Secondary End Points: NYHA Class and Health-Related Quality of Life
There was no statistically significant difference in change of NYHA functional class between darbepoetin alfa and placebo groups. Adjusted mean (SE) changes from baseline at week 27 were –0.19 (0.04) and –0.13 (0.04) in the darbepoetin alfa (n=142) and placebo groups (n=128), respectively (P=0.34).
The same proportion of patients in the darbepoetin alfa (n=115/162) and placebo (n=112/157) groups experienced an improvement in Patients Global Assessment of Change at week 27 (71% versus 71%; P=0.95). The Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire total score improved over time during the course of the study in both groups (mean [SE] change from baseline at week 27: placebo (n=120), –7.1 [1.9]; darbepoetin alfa (n=136), –9.3 [1.6]), but there was no difference in response between the placebo and active groups (P=0.38, t test).
Post Hoc Analysis: Change in Exercise Duration by Hemoglobin Response
In a post hoc analysis there was a statistically significant, hemoglobin-associated increase in adjusted mean change from baseline in exercise duration at study week 27 that was observed in each treatment group and in the combined group (Figure 4A). Independent of treatment, patients who had a mean rise of hemoglobin concentration
2.0 g/dL between week 17 and the end of the study compared with baseline showed the greatest improvement in exercise duration compared with patients who had a mean rise of hemoglobin <1.0 g/dL. However, individual subject data (Figure 4B) show that mean increases from baseline in hemoglobin concentration
2.0 g/dL occurred more frequently in the darbepoetin alfa group (n=52) than in the placebo group (n=6) for patients with available exercise data at week 27. The correlation between hemoglobin change and change in exercise duration was weak. In the combined treatment group, when the ANCOVA model adjusted for baseline exercise duration included hemoglobin response as a continuous variable in the model, a 1.0-g/dL increase in hemoglobin concentration corresponded to a 21-second improvement in exercise duration from baseline to week 27 (P=0.002 for the association).
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Corresponding analyses were completed for NYHA class, Patients Global Assessment of Change, and Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire. With the exception of NYHA class in the darbepoetin alfa group, no statistically significant correlation was seen between hemoglobin change and change in these measurements (data not shown).
Clinical Outcomes
During study participation (time from initial study drug administration to end of study), 18 patients (11%) in the placebo group and 11 patients (7%) in the darbepoetin alfa group died from any cause. Although our study was not designed to show differences in the prespecified efficacy analysis of time to death by any cause or first HF hospitalization, treatment with darbepoetin alfa was associated with a trend of lower risk for the composite end point (hazard ratio, 0.68; 95% CI, 0.43, 1.08; P=0.10), with both individual components contributing to this effect (Figure 5). The study design also included a long-term follow-up for mortality after study termination, during which an additional 7 and 9 deaths were reported for the placebo and darbepoetin alfa groups, respectively, resulting in an overall mortality of 25 (16%) in the placebo group and 20 (12%) in the darbepoetin alfa group. From this follow-up, the overall hazard ratio (95% CI) for all deaths, including deaths after the study was ended early, was 0.68 (0.38, 1.24) when the darbepoetin alfa group was compared with the placebo group.
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Adverse Event Assessments
Darbepoetin alfa was well tolerated, with an adverse event profile similar to placebo (Table 2). Most patients in both treatment groups (placebo, 92%; darbepoetin alfa, 93%) experienced at least 1 adverse event. The most common adverse events in the darbepoetin alfa and placebo groups, respectively, were musculoskeletal and connective tissue signs and symptoms (28% versus 28%), neurological signs and symptoms (25% versus 24%), worsening HF (23% versus 29%), upper respiratory tract infections (22% versus 26%), asthenic conditions (20% versus 26%), and breathing abnormalities (19% versus 22%). There were no differences in serious adverse events or treatment-related events (as considered by the investigator), and there was no difference between treatment groups in the incidence of adverse events of specific interest, defined as those historically associated with ESA treatment, such as thrombotic events, hypertension, and seizures (Table 2). All bioassay tests for neutralizing antibodies to darbepoetin alfa were negative, and no clinically significant changes in laboratory parameters (except for erythrocyte-related hematology data) or vital signs were observed (data not shown).
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Most deaths that occurred during the study were due to cardiac disorders: HF (placebo, n=8 versus darbepoetin alfa, n=3), ventricular arrhythmias and cardiac arrest (n=0 versus n=2), ischemia (n=0 versus n=1), and sudden death (n=4 versus n=2). One sudden death was considered to be treatment related by the blinded investigator and occurred in the placebo group.
| Discussion |
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The findings in this large, double-blind, placebo-controlled study contrast with earlier published data.3,14,15 In a small, single-center, single-blinded study by Mancini and colleagues,14 anemic HF patients (n=26) who received Epoetin alfa showed a significant improvement in peak
O2 and exercise duration compared with patients receiving placebo. Silverberg and colleagues15 reported significant improvements in NYHA functional class in patients receiving Epoetin alfa compared with control. In contrast, Ponikowski et al21 showed improved health-related quality of life and a trend toward increased exercise duration but no improvement in peak
O2 in a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of HF patients receiving darbepoetin alfa.
There are several possible reasons why the results for primary and secondary study end points presented here were smaller than expected. Performing exercise tests and symptom assessments in a multicenter study adds variability. Compared with the study performed by Mancini and colleagues, patients in STAMINA-HeFT were older, their baseline exercise duration was lower, and the degree of anemia (baseline median hemoglobin, 11.4 g/dL) and hemoglobin correction was more modest. When the patients age and comorbidities in this study are considered, exercise tolerance may have been limited by factors other than anemia or HF. Study patients at the investigative centers in this study were well treated, receiving standard evidence-based HF medications. Clinically meaningful improvements in quality of life22 were observed in both placebo- and darbepoetin alfa–treated patients, possibly related to the frequency of physician contact and/or administration of an injectable study drug in this study. Thus, it may be difficult to achieve additional improvements in symptoms and exercise tolerance in such patients. Nevertheless, contrary to earlier suggestions from smaller and less well-controlled studies, the trial reported here did not show that treating mild to moderate anemia in HF patients results in improved exercise duration or symptoms.
Previous retrospective studies have identified anemia as a powerful independent risk factor for morbidity and mortality in HF patients.1,2,8–13 Although the study presented here was not prospectively designed to evaluate the effect of darbepoetin alfa on clinical outcomes, a prespecified analysis showed a trend for a lower event rate for all-cause mortality or first HF hospitalization in patients receiving darbepoetin alfa. The morbidity and mortality results presented here raise the possibility of a potential benefit of treating anemia in HF despite no significant improvements in exercise duration, NYHA class, or quality of life compared with placebo.
A post hoc analysis of exercise duration by hemoglobin response showed a statistically significant hemoglobin-associated increase in exercise duration between baseline and study week 27 in each treatment group and in the combined group. Two observations are key here. First, it is not surprising that a large increment in hemoglobin may be necessary to affect exercise time. Second, an association between exercise duration and hemoglobin was also seen in the placebo group; however, it occurred less frequently because these patients rarely showed spontaneous, significant increases in hemoglobin. Anemia and/or change in hemoglobin in these study patients may be both a reflection and a determinant of their clinical status. It is important to note that it is unclear at this point whether the observed increase in exercise duration by hemoglobin response represents a true mechanistic effect, a mere association, or a marker of overall health.
The results presented here are in support of a proof of concept and encourage the need for larger outcomes trials such as the Reduction of Events with Darbepoetin alfa in Heart Failure (RED-HF) Trial, which will evaluate the safety and potential benefit of treatment of anemia with darbepoetin alfa in patients with symptomatic HF.23
Study Population
In regard to the patient cohort, there were more women (37%) than are typically enrolled in HF trials.2,9,24 However, the definition of anemia applied in this study (hemoglobin
9.0 and
12.5 g/dL for both men and women) may have contributed in part by not including men who are anemic according to the definition of the World Health Organization (hemoglobin <13.0 g/dL). In a retrospective analysis by Ezekowitz and colleagues,25 40% of men and 35% of women with HF were anemic according to World Health Organization guidelines. However, anemia predicted mortality in men but not in women, suggesting that gender-specific anemia definitions and stratification by sex may be important issues in the design of randomized outcomes trials evaluating the treatment of anemia in HF patients. As mentioned above, the median hemoglobin in the STAMINA-HeFT population was 11.4 g/dL at baseline. The selection of HF patients with mild to moderate anemia was intentional and based on the association of mild to moderate anemia with poor outcomes in the aforementioned studies.
Other characteristics of this study cohort include comprehensive medical treatment for HF, older age, and a longer history of HF. The renal function (median estimated glomerular filtration rate, 47.2 mL · min–1 per · 1.73 m–2; mean estimated glomerular filtration rate, 52.4 mL · min–1 per · 1.73 m–2) in the STAMINA-HeFT population is slightly lower than typically seen in HF trials,26 which may represent the older age, the higher percentage of women in this study, or the likely contributory role of renal dysfunction as the cause of anemia in some patients. Patients with severe renal insufficiency were excluded in STAMINA-HeFT, and although chronic renal insufficiency is likely a factor contributing to the development of anemia in patients with HF,27 the degree of renal insufficiency suggests that the etiology of anemia in this study population is multifactorial.
Adverse Event Profile
Over the years, concerns have emerged about the safety of ESA treatment in patients with cardiac diseases. Two recent studies, Correction of Hemoglobin and Outcomes in Renal Insufficiency (CHOIR) and Cardiovascular Risk Reduction by Early Anemia Treatment With Epoetin Beta (CREATE), in patients with chronic kidney disease randomized to receive epoetin alfa or beta, respectively, to achieve either a higher (up to 15.0 g/dL) or a lower (up to 11.5 g/dL) target hemoglobin showed that a higher hemoglobin level may be associated with increased risk of morbidity and mortality.28,29 An earlier study with Epoetin alfa comparing the effect of high (42%) versus low (30%) hematocrit maintenance in hemodialysis patients with HF or ischemic heart disease was terminated early because there was a trend toward increased mortality and a significantly higher incidence of thrombosis in patients randomized to the higher hematocrit level.30 It has been speculated that high doses of ESAs, rather than high hemoglobin concentrations, may lead to adverse outcomes.31 In the study reported here, fewer deaths occurred in the darbepoetin alfa group than in the placebo group. Darbepoetin alfa treatment was generally well tolerated and was associated with a similar number and incidence of adverse events compared with the administration of placebo. No incidences of deep vein thrombosis or pulmonary emboli occurred in the darbepoetin alfa treatment group, and the number and frequency of other adverse events of special interest, such as hypertension, myocardial infarction, stroke, subarachnoid hemorrhage, intracranial hemorrhage, and seizure, were similar between the darbepoetin alfa and placebo groups. There were 4 transient ischemic attacks in the darbepoetin alfa group compared with 1 in the placebo group, whereas the number and frequency of worsening HF episodes were higher in the placebo group. These findings in this HF population, which included many patients with underlying atherosclerotic disease, are reassuring as they relate to future investigation.
Conclusion
In this study, treatment of anemia with darbepoetin alfa in patients with anemia and symptomatic systolic HF was well tolerated and gradually raised and maintained hemoglobin concentrations within the target range. The adverse event profile was very similar for the groups treated with darbepoetin alfa or placebo. Darbepoetin alfa treatment did not improve the primary end point of exercise tolerance or secondary end points of NYHA functional class or health-related quality of life compared with placebo. However, a trend toward lower risk for all-cause mortality or first HF hospitalization was observed. The safety findings and the observed efficacy trend support the conduct of a larger trial to determine the potential benefit of treatment of anemia with darbepoetin alfa on clinical outcomes in patients with anemia and systolic HF.
| Acknowledgments |
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Sources of Funding
This study was funded by Amgen Inc.
Disclosures
Dr Ghali has received research grants from Amgen Inc and has served as a consultant and a steering committee member for Amgen Inc. Dr Anand has received research grants and research support from and served as a steering/executive committee member and advisory board member for Amgen Inc. Dr Abraham has served as a consultant to and on a speakers bureau of Amgen Inc. Dr Fonarow has received research grants from and served as a consultant to Amgen Inc. Dr Krum has received speaker fees from and served as a steering committee member for Amgen Inc. Dr Massie has served as a consultant and steering committee member for Amgen Inc. Dr Wasserman is employed by and owns stock in Amgen Inc. M.-L. Trotman is employed by and owns stock in Amgen Inc. Dr Knusel is employed by and owns stock in Amgen Inc. Y. Sun is employed by and owns stock in Amgen Inc. Dr Armstrong has received research grants from Amgen Inc. Dr Greenberg reports no conflicts.
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| Footnotes |
|---|
Presented in part at the annual Heart Failure Congress of the European Society of Cardiology, Helsinki, Finland, June 19, 2006; the World Congress of Cardiology (European Society of Cardiology/World Congress of Cardiology), Barcelona, Spain, September 3, 2006; and the American Heart Association Scientific Sessions, Chicago, Ill, November 12, 2006.
Clinical trial registration information—URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00049985.
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