Abstract
Patients with heart failure experience limitations in daily activity and poor quality-of-life. Prospective surveillance of health-related quality-of-life supplemented traditional death and hospitalization outcomes in the multinational, randomized, double-blinded CHART-1 clinical trial that assessed cardiopoiesis-guided cell therapy in ischemic heart failure patients with reduced left ventricular ejection fraction. The Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire (MLHFQ), a Food and Drug Administration qualified instrument for evaluating therapeutic effectiveness, was applied through the 1-year follow-up. Cell treated (n = 109) and sham procedure (n = 140) cohorts reported improved MLHFQ scores comparable between the 2 study arms (mean treatment difference with baseline adjustment −3.2 points, P =.107). Superiority of cell treatment over sham in betterment of the MLHFQ score was demonstrated in patients with pre-existing advanced left ventricular enlargement (baseline-adjusted mean treatment difference −6.4 points, P =.009). In this highly responsive subpopulation, benefit on the MLHFQ score paralleled reduction in death and hospitalization post-cell therapy (adjusted Mann-Whitney odds 1.43, 95% CI, 1.01-2.01; P =.039). The potential of cell therapy in addressing the quality-of-life dimension of heart failure requires further evaluation for disease relief.
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Yamada, S., Bartunek, J., Povsic, T. J., Cotter, G., Davison, B. A., Edwards, C., … Terzic, A. (2024). Cell Therapy Improves Quality-of-Life in Heart Failure: Outcomes From a Phase III Clinical Trial. Stem Cells Translational Medicine, 13(2), 116–124. https://doi.org/10.1093/stcltm/szad078
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