Abstract

In heart failure management, hospitalization is the main cause of medical costs and is associated with an increased risk of adverse events. This review reports evidence on hospitalization as the ideal setting for disease-modifying therapy implementation, with a particular focus on gliflozins in patients with stabilized acute heart failure. The authors analyze data from the EMPULSE trial, the largest clinical study that evaluated a gliflozin in acute heart failure in patients with both reduced and preserved systolic function. The win ratio approach for statistical analysis is also discussed. The EMPULSE trial showed that empagliflozin improved clinical outcomes in patients hospitalized for acute heart failure. Subsequent analyses have also highlighted favorable effects in terms of decongestion. Since clinical benefits due to gliflozin use occur early (after a few weeks) and in order to increase heart failure polypharmacy tolerability, the initiation of gliflozin treatment should be a priority over other treatment titration. Even in complex clinical settings, as in the elderly and in patients with kidney disease, evidence supports safety and good tolerability of gliflozins, which may facilitate initiation/titration of other treatments.

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