TOPCAT & FINEARTS-HF: Spironolactone & finerenone in heart failure with ejection fraction >40%

TOPCAT (spironolactone) & FINEARTS-HF (finerenone)

Bottom line:

  • In patients with HF with EF >40% (i.e., HF with mildly-reduced or preserved EF), MRAs reduced the risk of HF hospitalization vs placebo, did not reduce the risk of dying, and increased the risk of hypotension, hyperkalemia, and eGFR reduction.

  • For every 1000 patients treated with an MRA per year, 15 HF hospitalizations would be avoided, but there would be 20-30 more people with hypotension (with or without symptoms), 70-130 more patients with eGFR reduced by >30%, and 70-80 more patients with K >5.5 mmol/L.

  • There is no direct head-to-head comparison of finerenone vs spironolactone. Efficacy & safety seem to be similar with these 2 drugs; this likely represents a class effect of MRAs in HFmrEF/HFpEF.

TOPCAT 

TOPCAT: Spironolactone for heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. NEJM 2014;370:1383-92

TOPCAT-Americas: Circulation 2015;131:34-42

Patients (n=3445)

  • Inclusion

    • Age 50+

    • Clinical HF

    • LVEF >45% (measured within 6 months prior to randomization & after any prior ACS)

    • Controlled SBP (<140, or <160 if receiving 3+ antihypertensives)

    • Either,

      • 1+ HF-related hospitalization in prior 12 months, or

      • BNP >100 pg/mL (or N-terminal pro-BNP >360 pg/mL) within 30 days, not explained by another disease entity

  • Exclusion

    • Pericardial constriction

    • Hemodynamically significant uncorrected primary valvular heart disease

    • Infiltrative or hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HoCM)

    • Stroke, MI or CABG in past 90 days

    • AF with resting HR >90 bpm

    • Heart transplant recipient or currently implanted LVAD

    • Chronic pulmonary disease: Requiring home O2 or PO steroids, hospitalization for exacerbation within 12 months, or significant in the opinion of the investigator

  • "Average" patient

    • Age 69 y (age 75+ 27%), female 52%, white 89%

    • HF characteristics

      • Hospitalization in last 12 months 71%

      • NYHA functional class 1 (3%), 2 (64%), 3 (33%), 4 (<1%)

      • BNP 236

      • LVEF 56%

    • BP 130/80 mm Hg

    • Meds: Diuretic 80%, ACEI/ARB 85%, beta-blocker 75%

Intervention: Spironolactone

  • Initial dose: 15 mg PO daily x4 weeks

    • If initial dose tolerated, increased to 30 mg daily

    • If HF still symptomatic at month 4, increased to 45 mg daily

  • Monitoring: Measurement of SCr & serum K required <1 week after start or change of study drug dose

Comparator: Matching placebo

Outcomes @ mean 3.3 y

Efficacy

  • Death: Spironolactone 14.6% versus placebo 15.9%, hazard ratio (HR) 0.91 (95% confidence interval 0.77-1.08)

  • Hospitalization for any cause: 44.5% vs 46%, HR 0.94 (0.85-1.04)

  • Primary outcome (CV death, aborted cardiac arrest, HF hospitalization): 18.6% vs 20.4%, HR 0.89 (0.77-1.04)

  • Quality of life

    • Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire (KCCQ; 100-point scale, minimal clinically important difference -5): Versus placebo, +1.5 at 4 months & +1.9 at 36 months (p=0.02)

Safety

  • Discontinuation of study drug: 34.3% vs 31.4%

  • Doubling of SCr: 10.2% vs 7% (NNH 32)

  • Hyperkalemia (serum K >5.5 mmol/L): 18.7% vs 9.1% (NNH 11)

Internal validity

FINEARTS-HF

FINEARTS-HF: Finerenone in heart failure with mildly reduced or preserved ejection fraction. NEJM 2024

Patients (n=6001)

  • 7463 screened -> 6016 randomized -> 6001 analyzed

  • Inclusion:

    • Age >=40

    • HF with NYHA 2-4

    • Outpatient or hospitalized for heart failure (hemodynamically stable off inotropes)

    • Receiving diuretic >=30 days

    • LVEF >=40% measured in last year (could be <40% before)

    • Structural heart abnormality (LA enlargement, LVH)

    • NTproBNP >=300 pg/mL in SR or >=900 pg/mL in AF

  • Key exclusions:

    • SBP <90 mm Hg

    • eGFR <25

    • K >5.0 mmol/L; prior hyperkalemia with MRA

    • Untreated HTN; alternative causes for HF symptoms

  • “Average” trial patient:

    • 72 y/o, 46% female, white 79%/Asian 17%

    • PMHx: HTN 88%, T2DM 42%, AF 38%, prior LVEF <40% 5%

    • HF characteristics

      • Prior HF hospitalization 60%

      • Time since HF event: <=1 week 20%, 7-90 days 34%, >3 months/none 46%

      • NYHA 2 (69%), 3 (30%), 4 (<1%)

      • LVEF 52% (36% <50%)

      • NTproBNP ~1000

    • SBP 129 mm Hg, K 4.4 mmol/L, eGFR 62

    • Meds: Loop diuretic 87%, beta-blocker 85%, ACEI/ARB ~70%, ARNI 8-9%, SGLT2i 13-14%, GLP1-RA 2-3%

Intervention: Finerenone

  • If eGFR >60:

    • Starting dose: Finerenone 20 mg PO once daily

    • Increase to 40 mg PO once daily after 4 weeks (target dose)

    • Dose range 10-40 mg daily

  • If eGFR 25-60:

    • Starting dose: Finerenone 10 mg PO once daily

    • Increase to 20 mg PO once daily after 4 weeks (target dose)

    • Dose range: 10-20 mg daily

Comparator: Matching placebo

Outcomes @ median 2.7 y

Efficacy

  • Death: 16.4% vs 17.4% (HR 0.93, 95% CI 0.83-1.06)

  • Primary outcome (composite of cardiovascular death or worsening HF event [first or recurrent hospitalization or urgent visit for HF]):

    • Finerenone 14.9 vs placebo 17.7 per 100 patient-years

    • Rate ratio 0.84, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.74-0.95

    • Similar result using traditional “time to first event”: 20.8% vs 24.0% (hazard ratio [HR] 0.84, 95% CI 0.76-0.94)

    • Results consistent across subgroups

  • Kidney composite outcome (sustained eGFR decrease ≥50%, sustained eGFR to <15, or initiation of long-term dialysis or kidney transplantation): 2.5% vs 1.8% (HR 1.33, 95% CI 0.94-1.89)

  • NYHA improvement at 12 months: ~19% in both groups (odds ratio 1.01, 95% CI 0.88-1.15)

  • Change from baseline in Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire (KCCQ) total symptom score: +1.6 (95% CI +0.8 to +2.3) out of 100

Safety

  • Discontinued study drug: 20% in both groups

  • SBP <100 mm Hg (symptoms not specified): 18.5% vs 12.4%

  • Hyperkalemia (K >5.5 mmol/L): 14.3% vs 6.9%

    • >6: 3% vs 1.4%

    • “Investigator-reported hyperkalemia”: 9.7% vs 4.2%

    • Death from hyperkalemia: 0% in both groups

  • Serum creatinine increase to >221 umol/L: 2% vs 1.2%

Internal validity

  • Low risk of bias

    • Allocation bias: Randomized, allocation concealed

    • Performance & detection bias: Patients, clinicians, outcome assessors unaware of treatment assignment

    • Attrition bias: Intention to treat analysis; low loss to follow-up (~0.1%)

Meta-analysis

Mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists in heart failure: an individual patient level meta-analysis. Lancet 2024

Pooled results of TOPCAT + FINEARTS-HF:

  • Composite of cardiovascular death or HF hospitalization pool: HR 0.87 (95% CI 0.79-0.95), 1.5% absolute risk reduction

  • Death: HR 0.94 (0.85-1.03)

Safety: Similar absolute increase (vs placebo) with both spironolactone & finerenone

  • SBP <90 mm Hg:

    • TOPCAT: Spironolactone 4% vs placebo 2%

    • FINEARTS-HF: Finerenone 5% vs placebo 3%

  • eGFR reduction >30%:

    • TOPCAT: 31% vs 24%

    • FINEARTS-HF: 35% vs 22%

  • K >5.5 mmol/:

    • TOPCAT: 12% vs 5%

    • FINEARTS-HF: 15% vs 7%