Lee, MMY;
Masri, A;
Nassif, ME;
Barriales-Villa, R;
Abraham, TP;
Claggett, BL;
Coats, CJ;
Gimeno, JR;
Kulac, IJ;
Landsteiner, I;
et al.
Lee, MMY; Masri, A; Nassif, ME; Barriales-Villa, R; Abraham, TP; Claggett, BL; Coats, CJ; Gimeno, JR; Kulac, IJ; Landsteiner, I; Ma, C; Maron, MS; Olivotto, I; Owens, AT; Solomon, SD; Veselka, J; Jacoby, DL; Heitner, SB; Kupfer, S; Malik, FI; Meng, L; Wohltman, A; Lewis, GD; Wang, A; Sherrid, MV; Kelly, JP; Marian, AJ; Owens, AT; Wever-Pinzon, O; Owens, D; Wheeler, MT; Nagueh, SF; Rader, F; McGrew, FA; Wong, T; O'Neill, T; Bach, RG; Martinez, M; Lakdawala, NK; Collado, E; Turer, A; Desai Y, M; Hussain, Z; Tower-Rader, AF; Hannawi, B; Geske, J; Saberi, S; Phelan, D; Kramer, C; Sarswat, N; Ahmad, F; Choudhury, L; Markowitz, JS; Sen, S; Bering, P; Maron, MS; Jani, S; Brinkley, D; Naidu, S; Maurer, MS; Moss, N; Bilen, O; Silva Enciso, J; Fraser, R; Akinboboye, O; Asher, C; Emani, S; Sharma, A; Fermin, D; Lyle, M; Raymer, D; Darlington, A; Resnic, F; Nielsen, CD; Metra, M; Musumeci, B; Emdin, M; Targetti, M; Canepa, M; Michels, M; Knackstedt, C; Amin, AS; Barriales Villa, R; Garcia Pavia, P; Gimeno Blanes, JR; Hidalgo Urbano, RJ; Rincon Diaz, LM; Ripoll Vera, TVV; Garcia Alvarez, A; Zemanek, D; Jensen, M; Mogensen, J; Thune, JJ; Bundgaard, H; Charron, P; Trochu, J-N; Habib, G; Lhermusier, T; Reant, P; Hagege, AA; Logeart, D; Mitrovic, V; Edelmann, F; Seidler, T; Meder, B; Schulze, PC; Stoerk, S; Bekfani, T; Rassaf, T; Merkely, B; Arad, M; Halabi, M; Zwas, D; Piltz, X; Paz, O; Habib, M; Dudek, D; Oreziak, A; Wojakowski, W; Toste Batista, AM; Mesquita Bastos, JA; Elliott, PM; Mahmod, M; Coats, C; Cooper, R; Bradlow, W; Pantazis, A; Tome Esteban, MT; McGinnis, S; Campain, J; Cocca-Spofford, D; Giverts, I; Griskowitz, C; Newlands, C; Moreno, FM
(2024)
Aficamten and Cardiopulmonary Exercise Test Performance.
JAMA Cardiology, 9 (11).
p. 990.
ISSN 2380-6583
https://doi.org/10.1001/jamacardio.2024.2781
SGUL Authors: Tome, Maria Teresa
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Abstract
Importance Impaired exercise capacity is a cardinal manifestation of obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). The Phase 3 Trial to Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of Aficamten Compared to Placebo in Adults With Symptomatic Obstructive HCM (SEQUOIA-HCM) is a pivotal study characterizing the treatment effect of aficamten, a next-in-class cardiac myosin inhibitor, on a comprehensive set of exercise performance and clinical measures. Objective To evaluate the effect of aficamten on exercise performance using cardiopulmonary exercise testing with a novel integrated measure of maximal and submaximal exercise performance and evaluate other exercise measures and clinical correlates. Design, Setting, and Participants This was a prespecified analysis from SEQUOIA-HCM, a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trial. Patients were recruited from 101 sites in 14 countries (North America, Europe, Israel, and China). Individuals with symptomatic obstructive HCM with objective exertional intolerance (peak oxygen uptake [pVO2] ≤90% predicted) were included in the analysis. Data were analyzed from January to March 2024. Interventions Randomized 1:1 to aficamten (5-20 mg daily) or matching placebo for 24 weeks. Main Outcomes and Measures The primary outcome was change from baseline to week 24 in integrated exercise performance, defined as the 2-component z score of pVO2 and ventilatory efficiency throughout exercise (minute ventilation [VE]/carbon dioxide output [VCO2] slope). Response rates for achieving clinically meaningful thresholds for change in pVO2 and correlations with clinical measures of treatment effect (health status, echocardiographic/cardiac biomarkers) were also assessed. Results Among 282 randomized patients (mean [SD] age, 59.1 [12.9] years; 115 female [40.8%], 167 male [59.2%]), 263 (93.3%) had core laboratory–validated exercise testing at baseline and week 24. Integrated composite exercise performance improved in the aficamten group (mean [SD] z score, 0.17 [0.51]) from baseline to week 24, whereas the placebo group deteriorated (mean [SD] z score, −0.19 [0.45]), yielding a placebo-corrected improvement of 0.35 (95% CI, 0.25-0.46; P <.001). Further, aficamten treatment demonstrated significant improvements in total workload, circulatory power, exercise duration, heart rate reserve, peak heart rate, ventilatory efficiency, ventilatory power, and anaerobic threshold (all P <.001). In the aficamten group, large improvements (≥3.0 mL/kg per minute) in pVO2 were more common than large reductions (32% and 2%, respectively) compared with placebo (16% and 11%, respectively). Improvements in both components of the primary outcome, pVO2 and VE/VCO2 slope throughout exercise, were significantly correlated with improvements in symptom burden and hemodynamics (all P <.05). Conclusions and Relevance This prespecified analysis of the SEQUOIA-HCM randomized clinical trial found that aficamten treatment improved a broad range of exercise performance measures. These findings offer valuable insight into the therapeutic effects of aficamten. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05186818
Item Type: | Article | ||||||||
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Additional Information: | This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY-NC-ND License (https://jamanetwork.com/pages/cc-by-nc-nd-license-permissions). © 2024 Lee MMY et al. JAMA Cardiology. | ||||||||
SGUL Research Institute / Research Centre: | Academic Structure > Cardiovascular & Genomics Research Institute Academic Structure > Cardiovascular & Genomics Research Institute > Clinical Cardiology |
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Journal or Publication Title: | JAMA Cardiology | ||||||||
ISSN: | 2380-6583 | ||||||||
Language: | en | ||||||||
Publisher License: | Creative Commons: Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 | ||||||||
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URI: | https://openaccess.sgul.ac.uk/id/eprint/117845 | ||||||||
Publisher's version: | https://doi.org/10.1001/jamacardio.2024.2781 |
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