3 Heart-Disease Treatment Breakthroughs.

3 Heart-Disease Treatment Breakthroughs That Are Changing Lives

Nearly 27 million people in the United States have heart disease. It remains the leading cause of death for both U.S. men and women. However, during the last several years, there have been some truly significant advances in heart disease treatment that are now moving quickly toward widespread availability.

After a decade of failed efforts at developing new heart drugs, two important therapeutic breakthroughs are nearing FDA approval in 2015. These overdue advancements have the potential to change the practice of medicine. They can help patients who have not benefited adequately from existing therapies.

1. A Better Drug for Heart Failure
Congestive heart failure is a common disorder characterized by a failure of the heart muscle to forcefully pump blood to the body’s tissues. Heart attacks, high blood pressure, or diseases that weaken the heart muscle are common causes. Patients often have severe shortness of breath or fatigue that limits their ability to enjoy life. This disorder is the most common reason for hospital admission among Medicare patients.

In a large clinical trial, known as Paradigm-HF, the new drug LCZ696 was used to treat heart failure, and it was highly effective. It achieved a substantial 20-percent reduction in death or repeat hospitalization compared with the best currently available therapies. Although the benefits of a reduction in deaths are self-evident, the importance of reducing readmission to the hospital should not be underestimated. Currently, 20 percent or more of patients hospitalized for heart failure are re-admitted within 30 days. This represents a significant burden for patients and the healthcare system.

LCZ696 will probably be approved this year, providing a new, promising option for the 5.7 million Americans with heart failure.

2. New Treatment for High Cholesterol
The second innovative drug therapy is known as a PSCK9 inhibitor. This class of drugs has moved from discovery to the clinic more rapidly than any cardiovascular advancement in recent memory.

The single most important risk factor for developing coronary heart disease is an elevated level of “bad” cholesterol, also known as LDL-C. Currently, the best available drugs for reducing cholesterol, statins, have been shown to lower the risk of heart attack or stroke up to 35 percent.

Statins have been available for more than 25 years and have been enormously successful at reducing the burden of heart disease. Unfortunately, some patients cannot tolerate statins or can’t take large enough dosages to adequately reduce cholesterol levels. In other cases, LDL-C is very high due to an underlying genetic cause, and even the most powerful statins cannot reduce it to safe levels.

PSCK9 inhibitors have been shown to reduce bad LDL-C by as much as 50 percent to 70 percent and demonstrated few, if any, adverse effects. Although these drugs are given by injection every two weeks or once a month, they are injected through very small needles that produce little or no pain. Patients can easily self-inject these drugs using an automated injector.

This new class of drugs appears to be well tolerated even in patients who cannot take statins due to adverse effects. The FDA is considering applications from two pharmaceutical companies for drug approval in 2015.

3. Less Invasive Surgery for Heart Valve Disease
In 2011, the FDA approved a new procedure to treat heart valve disease without a major surgical operation, known as TAVR, or transcatheter aortic valve replacement. This device is approved for patients who need an aortic valve replacement, but who are too high risk for standard open-heart surgery.

This new approach is an important advance for patients who are too ill to withstand an open-chest procedure or for older patients. In the United States, patients currently undergoing TAVR typically include people with lung or kidney disease who would be less likely to tolerate major heart surgery to replace the aortic valve. TAVR was initially performed only at large academic medical centers. It is now moving gradually toward mainstream treatment throughout the world.

A catheter (small hollow tube) is placed in the groin (femoral artery) and guided into the heart chambers using advanced imaging techniques. Through this catheter, a collapsed tissue heart valve is guided into position and placed directly inside the diseased aortic valve. Once the new valve correctly positioned, a balloon is inflated to deploy the valve, incredibly, without opening the patient’s chest.

Currently TAVR is being performed at more than 350 hospitals in the United States.

Although heart disease remains the No. 1 cause of death in the United States, these treatment breakthroughs and other developments offer new hope to patients, providing long-awaited advances that are already making a difference. more  

View all 9 comments Below 9 comments
Sir, Has PSCK9 inhibitor been approved by FDA and introduced in USA & India by this name or any other name? Besides non-tolerance of statins what are the other advantages of this drug and its side effects. Does PSCK9 inhibitor has no side effects on muscles like statins. Can it raise HDL? more  
Dear Mr Sanjay Kumar , Thanks for your comments . I just wish to add that the main of my comments was that CABG (Bye Pass ) or Stenting ( PTCA ) are not the only options available as maybe msg being conveyed by most of present day cardiologist surgeons eg EECP /EDTA which are available in many places incl Delhi /GGN We may read the various articles such a large of knowledge available on internet but Non medical General Public like us including me should not try to learn too much as we hv hardly any knowledge & zero medical back ground pl S.P.JAIN On Wed, Jun 8, 2016 at 10:05 PM, Sanjay Kumar wrote: > more  
SP jain note bounce or rather more on medical language /terminology , please simplify it and explain in depth more  
Besides Allopatheic Medicines , Pranyam & few simple home remedies sufficient progress has already been made as regards Noninvasive Treatments viz EECP SITTINGS , ESMR SITTINGS ,MEGAVAC scrubbing & Vac sucking of Plaque ,ROTABLATOR as well as Chemical Dissolution /removal of Plaque by by EDTA Chelation Therapy pl. All above treatments are being successfully being practiced in NDIA as cheap noninvasive Alternates to CABG & PTCA being normally strongly recommended & being forced upon Heart Patients & families plDetails are available on Internet pl. more  
Sir Chandra Thank You more  
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