Published in:
01-10-2016 | Original Article
Early use of V2 receptor antagonists is associated with a shorter hospital stay and reduction in in-hospital death in patients with decompensated heart failure
Authors:
Ryuichi Matsukawa, Toru Kubota, Masanori Okabe, Yusuke Yamamoto
Published in:
Heart and Vessels
|
Issue 10/2016
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Abstract
Tolvaptan is an oral antagonist of arginine vasopressin receptor 2 that has been approved in Japan to reduce congestive symptoms in patients with heart failure refractory to loop diuretics. However, it is unknown whether the early use of tolvaptan results in better clinical outcomes. We retrospectively analyzed 102 consecutive patients with decompensated heart failure treated with tolvaptan at our hospital. A given patient was defined as a responder when the maximum urine volume was greater than 150 % of that observed before tolvaptan use. A logistic regression analysis revealed that the early use of tolvaptan (within 3 days after admission) was an independent factor associated with tolvaptan responsiveness. There were no significant differences in the baseline clinical parameters between the early and late tolvaptan use groups. However, the early use of tolvaptan was associated with higher tolvaptan responsiveness, a shorter duration of carperitide infusion, earlier initiation of ambulatory cardiac rehabilitation, shorter hospital stay, lower rate of in-hospital death. The early use of tolvaptan was associated with a shorter hospital stay and reduced mortality in our retrospective cohort. It might therefore be beneficial to consider administering tolvaptan earlier in patients with heart failure.