What proportion of real-world heart failure patients are eligible for ivabradine based on SHIFT trial criteria?
Only a small minority (14.2%) of real-world heart failure patients meet SHIFT trial criteria for ivabradine, and many of these patients are not receiving target doses of beta-blockers.
Background: The sinus node inhibitor ivabradine was approved for patients with heart failure (HF) after the ivabradine and outcomes in chronic HF (SHIFT Systolic Heart Failure Treatment With the IF Inhibitor Ivabradine Trial) trial. Our objective was to characterize the proportion of patients with HF eligible for ivabradine and the representativeness of the SHIFT trial enrollees compared with those in the Swedish Heart Failure Registry. Methods and Results: We examined 26 404 patients with clinical HF from the Swedish Heart Failure Registry and divided them into SHIFT type (left ventricular ejection fraction 50% of target dose. From those patients who had repeated visits within 6 months (n=5420) and 1 year (n=6840), respectively, 10.2% (n=555) and 10.6% (n=724) of SHIFT-type patients became ineligible, 77.3% (n=4188) and 77.3% (n=5287) remained ineligible, and 4.6% (n=252) and 4.9% (n=335) of non-SHIFT–type patients became eligible for initiation of ivabradine. Conclusions: From the Swedish Heart Failure Registry, 14.2% of patients with HF were eligible for ivabradine. These patients more commonly were not receiving target β-blocker dose. Over time, a minority of patients became ineligible and an even smaller minority became eligible.
Das et al. (Fri,) studied this question.