Effects of spironolactone on exercise blood pressure in patients at increased risk of developing heart failure: report from the HOMAGE trial

Fang-Fei Wei, Pierpaolo Pellicori, João Pedro Ferreira, Arantxa González, Beatrice Mariottoni, De-Wei An, Job A J Verdonschot, Chen Liu, Fozia Z Ahmed, Johannes Petutschnigg, Patrick Rossignol, Stephane Heymans, Joe Cuthbert, Nicolas Girerd, Andrew L Clark, Yan Li, Tim S Nawrot, Javier Díez, Faiez Zannad, John G F ClelandJan A Staessen*, HOMAGE investigators

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

None of the spironolactone trials in heart failure (HF) assessed the blood pressure (BP) responses to exercise, while conflicting results were reported for exercise capacity. In the HOMAGE trial, 527 patients at increased HF risk were randomized to usual treatment with or without spironolactone (25–50 mg/day). The current substudy included 113 controls and 114 patients assigned spironolactone, who all completed the incremental shuttle walk test at baseline and months 1 and 9. Quality of life (QoL) was assessed by EQ5D questionnaire. Between-group differences (spironolactone minus control [Δs]) were analyzed by repeated measures ANOVA with adjustment for baseline and, if appropriate, additionally for sex, age and body mass index. Δs in the pre-exercise systolic/diastolic BP were −8.00 mm Hg (95% CI, −11.6 to −4.43)/−0.85 mm Hg (−2.96 to 1.26) at month 1 and −9.58 mm Hg (−14.0 to −5.19)/−3.84 mm Hg (−6.22 to −1.47) at month 9. Δs in the post-exercise systolic/diastolic BP were −8.08 mm Hg (−14.2 to −2.01)/−2.07 mm Hg (−5.79 to 1.65) and −13.3 mm Hg (−19.9 to −6.75)/−4.62 mm Hg (−8.07 to −1.17), respectively. For completed shuttles, Δs at months 1 and 9 were 2.15 (−0.10 to 4.40) and 2.49 (−0.79 to 5.67), respectively. Δs in QoL were not significant. The correlations between the exercise-induced BP increases and the number of completed shuttles were similar in both groups. In conclusion, in patients at increased risk of developing HF, spironolactone reduced the pre- and post-exercise BP, but did not improve exercise capacity or QoL. (Figure presented.)

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3225-3236
Number of pages12
JournalHypertension Research
Volume47
Issue number11
Early online date6 Sept 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2024

Keywords

  • Coronary heart disease
  • Exercise capacity
  • Heart failure
  • Incremental shuttle walk test
  • Spironolactone

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Effects of spironolactone on exercise blood pressure in patients at increased risk of developing heart failure: report from the HOMAGE trial'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this