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Design and baseline characteristics of SALT‐HF trial: hypertonic saline therapy in ambulatory heart failure
by
Zegrí, I.
, Ortiz Cortés, C.
, Barrios, E.
, Jiménez‐Marrero, S.
, Sanchez‐Marteles, M.
, Morales‐Rull, J. L.
, Espriella, R.
, Cobo Marcos, M.
, Comín‐Colet, J.
, Diez‐Villanueva, P.
, Juan Bagudá, J.
, Montero Hernández, E.
, Nuñez, J.
, García‐Pinilla, J. M.
, Rubio Gracia, J.
, Goirigolzarri‐Artaza, J.
, Llacer, P.
, Prado Díaz, S.
in
Aged
/ Ambulatory Care - methods
/ Antigens
/ Ascites
/ Biomarkers
/ Blood pressure
/ Carbohydrates
/ Cardiac arrhythmia
/ Clinical medicine
/ Creatinine
/ Diuretic resistance
/ Diuretics
/ Double-Blind Method
/ Edema
/ Electrocardiography
/ Emergency medical care
/ Female
/ Follow-Up Studies
/ Furosemide - administration & dosage
/ Heart failure
/ Heart Failure - drug therapy
/ Heart Failure - physiopathology
/ Hemoglobin
/ Hospitalization
/ Humans
/ Hypertonic saline solution
/ Hypertonic therapy
/ Informed consent
/ Infusions, Intravenous
/ Male
/ Middle Aged
/ Mortality
/ Multicenter Studies as Topic
/ Outpatient with heart failure
/ Oxygen saturation
/ Patients
/ Peptides
/ Pleural effusion
/ Potassium
/ Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
/ Saline Solution, Hypertonic - administration & dosage
/ Salt
/ Sodium
/ Stroke Volume - physiology
/ Study Design
/ Treatment Outcome
/ Urine
2024
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Design and baseline characteristics of SALT‐HF trial: hypertonic saline therapy in ambulatory heart failure
by
Zegrí, I.
, Ortiz Cortés, C.
, Barrios, E.
, Jiménez‐Marrero, S.
, Sanchez‐Marteles, M.
, Morales‐Rull, J. L.
, Espriella, R.
, Cobo Marcos, M.
, Comín‐Colet, J.
, Diez‐Villanueva, P.
, Juan Bagudá, J.
, Montero Hernández, E.
, Nuñez, J.
, García‐Pinilla, J. M.
, Rubio Gracia, J.
, Goirigolzarri‐Artaza, J.
, Llacer, P.
, Prado Díaz, S.
in
Aged
/ Ambulatory Care - methods
/ Antigens
/ Ascites
/ Biomarkers
/ Blood pressure
/ Carbohydrates
/ Cardiac arrhythmia
/ Clinical medicine
/ Creatinine
/ Diuretic resistance
/ Diuretics
/ Double-Blind Method
/ Edema
/ Electrocardiography
/ Emergency medical care
/ Female
/ Follow-Up Studies
/ Furosemide - administration & dosage
/ Heart failure
/ Heart Failure - drug therapy
/ Heart Failure - physiopathology
/ Hemoglobin
/ Hospitalization
/ Humans
/ Hypertonic saline solution
/ Hypertonic therapy
/ Informed consent
/ Infusions, Intravenous
/ Male
/ Middle Aged
/ Mortality
/ Multicenter Studies as Topic
/ Outpatient with heart failure
/ Oxygen saturation
/ Patients
/ Peptides
/ Pleural effusion
/ Potassium
/ Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
/ Saline Solution, Hypertonic - administration & dosage
/ Salt
/ Sodium
/ Stroke Volume - physiology
/ Study Design
/ Treatment Outcome
/ Urine
2024
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Design and baseline characteristics of SALT‐HF trial: hypertonic saline therapy in ambulatory heart failure
by
Zegrí, I.
, Ortiz Cortés, C.
, Barrios, E.
, Jiménez‐Marrero, S.
, Sanchez‐Marteles, M.
, Morales‐Rull, J. L.
, Espriella, R.
, Cobo Marcos, M.
, Comín‐Colet, J.
, Diez‐Villanueva, P.
, Juan Bagudá, J.
, Montero Hernández, E.
, Nuñez, J.
, García‐Pinilla, J. M.
, Rubio Gracia, J.
, Goirigolzarri‐Artaza, J.
, Llacer, P.
, Prado Díaz, S.
in
Aged
/ Ambulatory Care - methods
/ Antigens
/ Ascites
/ Biomarkers
/ Blood pressure
/ Carbohydrates
/ Cardiac arrhythmia
/ Clinical medicine
/ Creatinine
/ Diuretic resistance
/ Diuretics
/ Double-Blind Method
/ Edema
/ Electrocardiography
/ Emergency medical care
/ Female
/ Follow-Up Studies
/ Furosemide - administration & dosage
/ Heart failure
/ Heart Failure - drug therapy
/ Heart Failure - physiopathology
/ Hemoglobin
/ Hospitalization
/ Humans
/ Hypertonic saline solution
/ Hypertonic therapy
/ Informed consent
/ Infusions, Intravenous
/ Male
/ Middle Aged
/ Mortality
/ Multicenter Studies as Topic
/ Outpatient with heart failure
/ Oxygen saturation
/ Patients
/ Peptides
/ Pleural effusion
/ Potassium
/ Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
/ Saline Solution, Hypertonic - administration & dosage
/ Salt
/ Sodium
/ Stroke Volume - physiology
/ Study Design
/ Treatment Outcome
/ Urine
2024
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Design and baseline characteristics of SALT‐HF trial: hypertonic saline therapy in ambulatory heart failure
Journal Article
Design and baseline characteristics of SALT‐HF trial: hypertonic saline therapy in ambulatory heart failure
2024
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Overview
Aims Hypertonic saline solution (HSS) plus intravenous (IV) loop diuretic appears to enhance the diuretic response in patients hospitalized for heart failure (HF). The efficacy and safety of this therapy in the ambulatory setting have not been evaluated. We aimed to describe the design and baseline characteristics of the SALT‐HF trial participants. Methods and results ‘Efficacy of Saline Hypertonic Therapy in Ambulatory Patients with HF’ (SALT‐HF) trial was a multicenter, double‐blinded, and randomized study involving ambulatory patients who experienced worsening heart failure (WHF) without criteria for hospitalization. Enrolled patients had to present at least two signs of volume overload, use ≥ 80 mg of oral furosemide daily, and have elevated natriuretic peptides. Patients were randomized 1:1 to treatment with a 1‐h infusion of IV furosemide plus HSS (2.6–3.4% NaCl depending on plasmatic sodium levels) versus a 1‐h infusion of IV furosemide at the same dose (125–250 mg, depending on basal loop diuretic dose). Clinical, laboratory, and imaging parameters were collected at baseline and after 7 days, and a telephone visit was planned after 30 days. The primary endpoint was 3‐h diuresis after treatment started. Secondary endpoints included (a) 7‐day changes in congestion data, (b) 7‐day changes in kidney function and electrolytes, (c) 30‐day clinical events (need of IV diuretic, HF hospitalization, cardiovascular mortality, all‐cause mortality or HF‐hospitalization). Results A total of 167 participants [median age, 81 years; interquartile range (IQR), 73–87, 30.5% females] were randomized across 13 sites between December 2020 and March 2023. Half of the participants (n = 82) had an ejection fraction >50%. Most patients showed a high burden of comorbidities, with a median Charlson index of 3 (IQR: 2–4). Common co‐morbidities included diabetes mellitus (41%, n = 69), atrial fibrillation (80%, n = 134), and chronic kidney disease (64%, n = 107). Patients exhibited a poor functional NYHA class (69% presenting NYHA III) and several signs of congestion. The mean composite congestion score was 4.3 (standard deviation: 1.7). Ninety per cent of the patients (n = 151) presented oedema and jugular engorgement, and 71% (n = 118) showed lung B lines assessed by ultrasound. Median inferior vena cava diameter was 23 mm, (IQR: 21–25), and plasmatic levels of N‐terminal‐pro‐B‐type natriuretic peptide (NTproBNP) and antigen carbohydrate 125 (CA125) were increased (median NT‐proBNP 4969 pg/mL, IQR: 2508–9328; median CA125 46 U/L, IQR: 20–114). Conclusions SALT‐HF trial randomized 167 ambulatory patients with WHF and will determine whether an infusion of hypertonic saline therapy plus furosemide increases diuresis and improves decongestion compared to equivalent furosemide administration alone.
Publisher
Oxford University Press,John Wiley and Sons Inc,Wiley
Subject
/ Antigens
/ Ascites
/ Edema
/ Female
/ Furosemide - administration & dosage
/ Heart Failure - drug therapy
/ Heart Failure - physiopathology
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Multicenter Studies as Topic
/ Outpatient with heart failure
/ Patients
/ Peptides
/ Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
/ Saline Solution, Hypertonic - administration & dosage
/ Salt
/ Sodium
/ Urine
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