Abstract
Preserved urinary excretion of aquaporin 2, an index for the function of vasopressin V2 receptor (V2-R), has been reported to predict a favorable response of heart failure patients to treatment with tolvaptan. In this study, we investigated the long-term effects of tolvaptan treatment on clinical outcomes and V2-R function in patients with acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF). We enrolled 90 consecutive patients who were hospitalized in Sapporo Medical University Hospital for ADHF and treated with tolvaptan in the BOREAS-ADHF registry and analyzed patients who continued taking tolvaptan after discharge. The effect of tolvaptan treatment on rehospitalization for HF or death was investigated according to whether the V2-R function was preserved (first morning urine osmolarity ≥ 352 mOsm/L, High-Uosm) or impaired (Uosm < 352 mOsm/L, Low-Uosm). During a median follow-up period of 443 days, significantly fewer patients in the High-Uosm group experienced adverse events than did patients in the Low-Uosm group (P < 0.001). Among the patients with High-Uosm, early commencement of tolvaptan administration (on or before day 7 of hospitalization, Early/High-Uosm) significantly reduced adverse events compared to late administration (after day 7 of hospitalization, Late/High-Uosm). Uosm measured during the long-term follow-up period after discharge was significantly reduced compared to that before commencement of tolvaptan administration in the Late/High-Uosm group (from 468 ± 88 to 395 ± 108 mOsm, -18.3 ± 19.6%, P < 0.05) but not in the Early/High-Uosm group (from 478 ± 115 to 455 ± 133 mOsm, -0.50 ± 35.3%, P = 0.66). These findings indicate that early commencement and long-term continuation of tolvaptan treatment attenuate functional impairment of V2-R and improve clinical outcomes in ADHF patients with preserved V2-R function.
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