Recognition of the Large Ambulatory C2D Stage of Advanced Heart Failure - A Call to Action

Shannon M. Dunlay, Sean P. Pinney, Anuradha Lala, Garrick C. Stewart, Colleen McIlvennan, Renee P. Wong, Alanna A. Morris, Francis D. Pagani, Larry A. Allen, Khadijah Breathett, Rebecca Cogswell, Monica M. Colvin, Jennifer A. Cowger, Stavros G. Drakos, Laura P. Gelfman, Manreet K. Kanwar, Michael S. Kiernan, Michelle M. Kittleson, Eldrin F. Lewis, Nader MoazamiModele O. Ogunniyi, Ambarish Pandey, Joseph G. Rogers, Kurt R. Schumacher, Mark S. Slaughter, Ryan J. Tedford, Jeffrey Teuteberg, Hannah A. Valantine, Ersilia M. Defilippis, Debra D. Dixon, Jessica R. Golbus, Gaurav Gulati, Thomas C. Hanff, Stephanie Hsiao, Sabra C. Lewsey, Amanda D. McCormick, Aditi Nayak, Kathleen N. Fenton, Lisa Schwartz Longacre, Sujata M. Shanbhag, Wendy C. Taddei-Peters, Lynne Warner Stevenson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Importance: The advanced ambulatory heart failure (HF) population comprises patients who have progressed beyond the pillars of recommended stage C HF therapies but can still find meaningful life-years ahead. Although these patients are commonly encountered in practice, national databases selectively capture the small groups accepted for heart transplant listing or left ventricular assist devices. The epidemiology, trajectories, and therapies for other ambulatory patients with advanced HF are poorly understood. Observations: In December 2022, the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute convened a team of experts to identify knowledge gaps and research priorities for the ambulatory population with limiting daily symptoms and transition toward refractory end-stage D HF, designated as stage C2D. This article summarizes the findings from that 3-day workshop. Workshop participants surveyed the initial challenges and knowledge gaps for (1) recognition of ambulatory C2D HF, (2) estimation of the magnitude of the affected population and identifiable subpopulations, and (3) physiologic phenotypes, such as low cardiac output, right HF, cardiorenal syndromes, congestive hepatopathy and frailty, which offer distinct targets for existing and emerging therapies. Social drivers of HF and patient preferences for quality/length of survival were highlighted as essential modifiers for personalization of therapies. Conclusions and Relevance: Ten key points summarized workshop findings, with target cohorts for study proposed as a crucial next step. This workshop summary is intended as a call for action to address knowledge gaps and develop new strategies to improve outcomes in the large ambulatory population with C2D HF.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)391-398
Number of pages8
JournalJAMA cardiology
Volume10
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 9 2025

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  • Journal Article

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